Just a note for anyone tring to get around this. If your vfat system is
not important to your system starting (it shouldn't be) then you can set
the last two numbers of the relevant entry in your fstab file as '0'.
For example:

# /etc/fstab: static file system information.
[clip]
# /dev/sda9 -- converted during upgrade to edgy
UUID=44F6-7DE3 /media/storage vfat defaults,utf8,umask=000,gid=46 0 0

"UUID=44F6-7DE3" is the strange way my system refers to my vfat
partition mounted at /media/storage. If I remeber rightly, the final two
numbers, both zero in this example, tell the system to continue booting
if it can't find this partition (the first zero) and to not check it's
integrity (the second zero)

Remember that you will get no warnings if your vfat partition becomes
corrupt if you use this solution. There are also packages for
configuring how often a specific partition is checked. You can find more
about those in the ubuntu-users mailing list.

-- 
Dosfsck Run On Every Boot on FAT
https://launchpad.net/bugs/59293

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