adydula;476010 Wrote: 
> Hello,
> 
> This is from Microsoft:
> 
> Note the following limitations when you use the FAT32 file system with
> Windows XP: 
> 
> Clusters cannot be 64 kilobytes (KB) or larger. If clusters are 64 KB
> or larger, some programs (such as Setup programs) may incorrectly
> calculate disk space.
> 
> A FAT32 volume must contain a minimum of 65,527 clusters. You cannot
> increase the cluster size on a volume that uses the FAT32 file system so
> that it contains fewer than 65,527 clusters.
> 
> The maximum disk size is approximately 8 terabytes when you take into
> account the following variables: The maximum possible number of clusters
> on a FAT32 volume is 268,435,445, and there is a maximum of 32 KB per
> cluster, along with the space required for the file allocation table
> (FAT).
> 
> You cannot decrease the cluster size on a FAT32 volume so that the size
> of the FAT is larger than 16 megabytes (MB) minus 64 KB. 
> 
> You cannot format a volume larger than 32 gigabytes (GB) in size using
> the FAT32 file system during the Windows XP installation process.
> 
> Windows XP can mount and support FAT32 volumes larger than 32 GB
> (subject to the other limits), but you cannot create a FAT32 volume
> larger than 32 GB by using the Format tool during Setup.
> 
> If you need to format a volume that is larger than 32 GB, use the NTFS
> file system to format it. Another option is to start from a Microsoft
> Windows 98 or Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition (Me) Startup disk and
> use the Format tool included on the disk. 
> 
> 
> This said the file size limitation of 4gb is not an issue for us.
> 
> The main concerns are:
> 
> 1. You can not format a FAT32 partition or volume greater than 32gb
> using WIN XP. You can mount drives partitioned larger than 32gb but its
> with XP.
> Does the linux OS support partitions larger than 32gb? If the OS on the
> Touch will allow drives partitioned greater than 32gb this is good.
> 
> 2. Many newer usb drives come preformatted with NTFS to support
> Microsofts NTFS etc..its there recommendation to use NTFS over FAT32 on
> large drives.
> If a person gets a new usb drive partitioned with ntfs they may not
> know how or have a way to re-format this drive to FAT32. This will cause
> calls to logitech as these new large $99 1 TB USB drives come out , and
> they are out.
> 
> From some of the comments from thomas forester it seems that he is
> using drives formated larger than 32 gb , which is good. The newer ntfs
> drives would need to be re-formated etc.
> 
> Some folks hav 90,000 songs in their collections and NTFS will be an
> adavantage if the drivers are written to properly support the NTFS file
> structure...with larger and larger drives.
> 
> FAT32 as some have said in real world performance may not be that
> noticeable but its indeed better , forward looking and I would think
> that Logitech would want to be forward looking and best of
> breed...legacy standards are hard to leave sometime, but the time has
> come.!
> 
> Alex

Alex, which part of this do you have a problem with?

1) I have successfully reformatted a 1Tb NTFS drive to FAT32 (several
times actually) under XP using fat32format.exe.

2) Performance differances (NTFS vs FAT32) are irrelevant for an
external USB drive since the USB interface is always the bottleneck.


Phil


-- 
Phil Leigh

You want to see the signal path BEFORE it gets onto a CD/vinyl...it
ain't what you'd call minimal...
SB Touch Beta (wired) - TACT 2.2X (Linear PSU) + Good Vibrations S/W -
MF Triplethreat(Audiocom full mods) - Linn 5103 - Aktiv 5.1 system (6x
LK140's, ESPEK/TRIKAN/KATAN/SEIZMIK 10.5), Townsend Supertweeters, Blue
Jeans Digital,Kimber Speaker & Chord Interconnect cables
Kitchen Boom, Outdoors: SB Radio
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