Hi,
you may try fat32 for using on both systems. I made three partitions:
ntfsuse with windows
ext3use with lenny
fat32 for data storage use for lenny and windows
best regards and a nice day
klaus
Am Donnerstag, den 28.01.2010, 17:35 + schrieb Bhasker C
On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 10:22:06AM +0100, Klaus Wolf wrote:
Hi,
you may try fat32 for using on both systems. I made three partitions:
ntfsuse with windows
ext3use with lenny
fat32 for data storage use for lenny and windows
I have reliable used ntfs-3g (fuse
On Fri, 2010-01-29 at 20:36 +1100, Alex Samad wrote:
I have reliable used ntfs-3g (fuse based ntfs) to write to ntfs
partitions with a zero defect rate
I have to, but I have noticed that files get horribly fragmented and
this doesn't get fixed by the Windows defrag program, or by deleting
then
On Fri, Jan 29, 2010 at 1:22 AM, Klaus Wolf kl...@linuxwolf.de wrote:
Hi,
you may try fat32 for using on both systems. I made three partitions:
ntfsuse with windows
ext3use with lenny
fat32 for data storage use for lenny and windows
I second this as long
On Sat, 23 Jan 2010, Bhasker C V wrote:
Camaleón wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jan 2010 22:28:26 +, Bhasker C V wrote:
(...)
So, the question... what FS to use which is good and reliable in both
windows and also linux ?
Is there any file system in linux which can work in windows also
On Fri,22.Jan.10, 22:28:26, Bhasker C V wrote:
Anyone can recommend VFAT. FAT32 being supported by XP and well
supported by linux makes it a good candidate. The problem with
FAT32, I guess (correct me if I am wrong), there is no support for
case-sensitive file names in the FAT32 file system.
On Sat, 23 Jan 2010 22:19:44 +, Joe wrote:
Bhasker C V wrote:
Camaleón wrote:
I wonder if nowadays UDF could be used to deal with this problematic
:-?
Tried it. UDF from udftools(1.0.0b2 ) on etch creates an UDF which is
not working with windows.
I am then left only with an
Hi,
This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise,
I think this would be a good reference for
anybody.
I think this question has been debated a lot but still there is no clear
information on what to do.
The question is, if you want to share data between linux and
Hi,
This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise, I
think this would be a good reference for anybody.
I think this question has been debated a lot but still there is no clear
information on what to do.
The question is, if you want to share data between linux and
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On 23-1-2010 9:13, Bhasker C V wrote:
Hi,
This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise,
I think this would be a good reference for
anybody.
I think this question has been debated a lot but still there is no clear
Nick Douma wrote:
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Hash: SHA1
On 23-1-2010 9:13, Bhasker C V wrote:
Hi,
This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise,
I think this would be a good reference for
anybody.
I think this question has been debated a lot but still
On Fri, Jan 22, 2010 at 10:28:26PM +, Bhasker C V wrote:
Hi,
This may not be debian-specific question, but with the group expertise,
I think this would be a good reference for anybody.
I think this question has been debated a lot but still there is no clear
information on what to do.
On Fri, 22 Jan 2010 22:28:26 +, Bhasker C V wrote:
(...)
So, the question... what FS to use which is good and reliable in both
windows and also linux ?
Is there any file system in linux which can work in windows also
(meaning it can be read and optionally written-to in windows
Camaleón wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jan 2010 22:28:26 +, Bhasker C V wrote:
(...)
So, the question... what FS to use which is good and reliable in both
windows and also linux ?
Is there any file system in linux which can work in windows also
(meaning it can be read and optionally
On Sat, Jan 23, 2010 at 01:30:59PM +, Bhasker C V wrote:
Nick Douma wrote:
[snip]
Using NTFS on linux and windows is cool. I have consistently seen that
when there are large number of files, undoubtably,
ntfs volume goes corrupt and chkdsk simply removes files and creates
data loss. I
Alex Samad wrote:
On Sat, Jan 23, 2010 at 01:30:59PM +, Bhasker C V wrote:
Nick Douma wrote:
[snip]
Using NTFS on linux and windows is cool. I have consistently seen that
when there are large number of files, undoubtably,
ntfs volume goes corrupt and chkdsk simply removes
Bhasker C V wrote:
Camaleón wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jan 2010 22:28:26 +, Bhasker C V wrote:
(...)
So, the question... what FS to use which is good and reliable in both
windows and also linux ?
Is there any file system in linux which can work in windows also
(meaning it can be read and
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