Are we now able to read AND write safely to NTFS? If so, is the same
true for the NTFS that Windows 2000 and XP use, NTFS 5.0? This is what
keeps me from having all my Winders installs in total NTFS format. I
always leave at least one small partition as FAT32 for transfer. One
BIG problem I have is that all my MP3s and movie files are in NTFS
drives and too big to copy all at once over to a ext3 or other type of
partition.
I think I saw a ext FS plug-in for Windows. Anybody ever try that?
*******************************************
If the automobile had followed the same development cycle as the
computer, a Rolls-Royce would today cost $100, get a million miles per
gallon, and explode once a year, killing everyone inside. - Robert X.
Cringely
-----Original Message-----
From:On Behalf Of Monty J. Harder
Sent: Saturday, November 05, 2005 4:44 PM
Subject: Re: Somewhat OT: Spyware or Cancerous Software?
I'm with Hans Reiser on this. The Registry per se exists
because MS filesystems do a horrible job of storing small snippets of
information. For example, the command
echo "hello" >test.txt
under most Unices will generally take either 512, 1024 bytes of
disk space for the inode, and a few more for the directory entry. But
in MS FAT filesystems, that same file is going to use up as much as 32
(or in a particularly perverse situation, 64) Kb. It's not quite so
horrible under NTFS, but FAT was the norm when the Registry was
invented.