Your biggest problem is that Windows cannot understand Linux file systems,
and Linux can only read NTFS.

I work around this problem by having a third hard drive to store files on
and trade between operating systems.

Linux Drive - ext2/ext3/ReiserFS/whatever
Windows - NTFS
Third Drive - FAT32

This is also nice since it lets me nuke and pave at will to try other
distros without worring about writing over my files.
You might want to invest in a high capacity flash drive.

On 1/23/07, Ben Barrett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

On 1/23/07, Harald Sundt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I have a Laptop with 2 partitions:
>
> Windows XP
>
> Fedora Linux
>
> In Windows,... how do I read data files on my Linux partition


This is very difficult if the linux partition is not in a format that
Windows can understand.
If linux was installed on a FAT partition you should be seeing it
already.... I remember seeing
an ext2 (or was it ext3) driver for windows, last time I saw it, it was
read-only for safety.


In Linux,... how do I read files on my Windows Partition


Also depends on what part. types you use.  Mount the partition on a
mountpoint,
using the appropriate type (FAT, NTFS, etc), then browse.


I don't ask much!
>
> Thancx
>
> Hal




It doesn't seem like much, but depending on your circumstances, it could
be nigh impossible.  :(

sorry,

   Ben


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