On Tue, 27 Oct 2009 05:29 am, Chris Rees wrote:
I have always considered hard disk, floppy diskette, and
compact disc (and digital versatile disc) to be the
terminology; but then again the official British spelling is
disc, whereas AFAICR the US spelling is disk.
What organisation defines
... If you are refering to a kind of
hard disk, use disk with k. Think like diskette. If you
are refering to optical media, use disc with c. Think like
CD = compact disc.
An arbitrary convention adopted by you and a few other people
does not invalidate the dictionary spellings
2009/10/26 Matthew Seaman m.sea...@infracaninophile.co.uk:
Chris Rees wrote:
I have always considered hard disk, floppy diskette, and compact disc
(and digital versatile disc) to be the terminology; but then again the
official British spelling is disc, whereas AFAICR the US spelling is
disk.
On Tue, Oct 27, 2009 at 12:55:51AM -0700, per...@pluto.rain.com wrote:
... If you are refering to a kind of
hard disk, use disk with k. Think like diskette. If you
are refering to optical media, use disc with c. Think like
CD = compact disc.
An arbitrary convention adopted
On Tue, 27 Oct 2009 15:27:23 +1030, Malcolm Kay malcolm@internode.on.net
wrote:
An arbitrary convention adopted by you and a few other people
does not invalidate the dictionary spellings and usage.
As I mentioned before, the (hard) disk vs. (optical) disc
differentiation seems to be quite
On Tue, 27 Oct 2009 16:21:37 +1030, Malcolm Kay malcolm@internode.on.net
wrote:
Further,
If we look at some acronyms associated with optical media we
have:
CD - Compact Disc
DVD - Digital Video Disc
but:
UDF - Universal Disk Format (The file system frequently used on
CDs and DVDs)
At Mon, 26 Oct 2009 14:32:02 +1100,
Rob Hurle wrote:
Thank you to everyone who answered:
kldload fusefs
What does ls -la /dev/da* show you.
So the device is there, but ntfs-3g fails to see it.
Probably kldload fusefs isn't loaded (until Saturday)
Yes, fuse.ko had to me copied
Hi Rob,
just a little terminology note (from me, Mister Use-the-correct-words):
If you are refering to a kind of hard disk, use disk with k.
Think like diskette. If you are refering to optical media,
use disc with c. Think like CD = compact disc.
Disk: disk pack, hard disk, disk drive
Disc:
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:33:16 +1100, Rob Hurle rob1...@gmail.com wrote:
I need to transfer between
FreeBSD and Windows, both ways :-(
Could you imagine to use FAT instead of NTFS, or do you
intendedly require features that are specific to NTFS?
I found that FAT - in FreeBSD: msdosfs - is
Hi Polytropon,
just a little terminology note (from me, Mister Use-the-correct-words):
If you are refering to a kind of hard disk, use disk with k.
Think like diskette. If you are refering to optical media,
use disc with c. Think like CD = compact disc.
Thanks for your comment. disk began
Polytropon wrote:
Hi Rob,
just a little terminology note (from me, Mister Use-the-correct-words):
If you are refering to a kind of hard disk, use disk with k.
Think like diskette. If you are refering to optical media,
use disc with c. Think like CD = compact disc.
Disk: disk pack, hard disk,
Rob Hurle wrote:
Thanks for your comments too, about use of the FAT32 file system. I
had thought about that, but the NTFS seemed to be a bit more universal
- I'm not sure that FAT file systems are recognised by default on Macs
(for example).
FAT (and almost to the same extent, FAT32)
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 22:37:50 +1100, Rob Hurle rob1...@gmail.com wrote:
Thanks for your comment. disk began life as the American spelling
(probably older English, copied from Greek) and disc was the English
(UK, Australia, probably South Africa and other places). Here, in
Australia, I am used
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:07:45 +, Arthur Chance free...@qeng-ho.org wrote:
The distinction you make is one
I've not come across before, and I've worked with computers for nearly
40 years.
This specific differentiation is common at least in Germany.
We handle foreign words quite
On 10/26/09, Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote:
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:07:45 +, Arthur Chance free...@qeng-ho.org
wrote:
The distinction you make is one
I've not come across before, and I've worked with computers for nearly
40 years.
Same here. I've always been told they were completely
2009/10/26 Bob Johnson fbsdli...@gmail.com:
On 10/26/09, Polytropon free...@edvax.de wrote:
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:07:45 +, Arthur Chance free...@qeng-ho.org
wrote:
The distinction you make is one
I've not come across before, and I've worked with computers for nearly
40 years.
Same
Chris Rees wrote:
I have always considered hard disk, floppy diskette, and compact disc
(and digital versatile disc) to be the terminology; but then again the
official British spelling is disc, whereas AFAICR the US spelling is
disk.
The official British spelling is whichever one of disc or
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 08:39 pm, Polytropon wrote:
Hi Rob,
just a little terminology note (from me, Mister
Use-the-correct-words): If you are refering to a kind of hard
disk, use disk with k. Think like diskette. If you are
refering to optical media, use disc with c. Think like CD =
compact
On Tue, 27 Oct 2009 03:27 pm, Malcolm Kay wrote:
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 08:39 pm, Polytropon wrote:
Hi Rob,
just a little terminology note (from me, Mister
Use-the-correct-words): If you are refering to a kind of
hard disk, use disk with k. Think like diskette. If you
are refering to
Dear All,
This may sound like a Windows problem, but please read on. I made a
mistake and bought a WD My Passport external 350GB disc drive for
use on several Windows machines, on some of which I don't have admin
access, and a couple of FreeBSD systems.
On first use on Windows the disc
Rob Hurle wrote:
Dear All,
This may sound like a Windows problem, but please read on. I made a
mistake and bought a WD My Passport external 350GB disc drive for
use on several Windows machines, on some of which I don't have admin
access, and a couple of FreeBSD systems.
On first use
Hi Manolis,
Thanks very much for that very helpful reply:
Now to FreeBSD. The newly formatted (as NTFS) disc appears as two
devices - /dev/cd0 (never seen this before)
This is how a USB cdrom appears to FreeBSD - as a SCSI device. No
problem there.
cp: /usb0/MyStuff/test: No such
On Mon, 26 Oct 2009 12:33:16 +1100
Rob Hurle rob1...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Manolis,
Thanks very much for that very helpful reply:
Now to FreeBSD. The newly formatted (as NTFS) disc appears as two
devices - /dev/cd0 (never seen this before)
This is how a USB cdrom appears to
Rob Hurle wrote:
Dear All,
This may sound like a Windows problem, but please read on. I made a
mistake and bought a WD My Passport external 350GB disc drive for
use on several Windows machines, on some of which I don't have admin
access, and a couple of FreeBSD systems.
On first use on
Rob Hurle said the following on 2009-10-26 02:33:
freebsd [12:12] /usr/ports#ll /dev/da0s1
crw-r- 1 root operator0, 122 26 Oct 09:02 /dev/da0s1
freebsd [12:12] /usr/ports#ntfs-3g -o rw /dev/da0s1 /mnt
fuse: failed to open fuse device: No such file or directory
kldload fusefs
What
Thank you to everyone who answered:
kldload fusefs
What does ls -la /dev/da* show you.
So the device is there, but ntfs-3g fails to see it.
Probably kldload fusefs isn't loaded (until Saturday)
Yes, fuse.ko had to me copied from /usr/local/modules to /boot/kernel
and then kloaded.
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