No win 98 or ME will not see the NTFS ,NTFS is more stable and the single file size can be upto 2Gigs .thats the main difference to my knowledge.one way or the other it wouldn't matter what one you use ,thats my opinion !:)
caperjack
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not sure about the boot disk disk but to add more information on the difference between the two.
The biggest difference comes when you network and share files over a LAN,
FAT: you can specify only down to which folder to share, and you can add a password to it, but anyone on the LAN who has the password can get into it.
NTFS: You can share files down to a specific file and not a whole directory and you can type in which computers can access it. So if you want no one else but a certain computer to read the file over the LAN, you can set it to do so, but not in FAT
Jra2003
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no, on fat32, you can only narrow down to the directory, either the whole directory or nothing at all. NTFS adds more flexibility so you are allowed to specify which files to share. It isn't really dependent on the OS just format type.
Jra2003
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Thank you very much for the info RC_Razor. what if my win2k crashes and I want to boot from a floppy? is there a bootdisk that can access an NTFS? if there is, then I'll probably have to repartition my HDD to NTFS since everything you've said sums up everything to the NTFS being way much better than FAT/FAT32.
Your new partitions should be NTFS. It's more reliable and can handle larger files. Contrary to earlier posts, it'sFAT32 that has a 2GB-per-file limit, the limit for NTFS is much higher.
I generally reserve about a 10 GB partition for Windows, the rest for data. The data partition should be NTFS, too - but be aware that on a slower machine it's more overhead. There are ways to speed it up, see Disable the NTFS Last Access Time Stamp for an example.
http://www.ntfs.com/boot-disk.htm has a free-download floppy disk image that, when expanded to a floppy, creates a bootable disk that will allow you to copy files from an NTFS partition to a FAT32 partition (or another hard drive) or a network. The site has other utilities as well, both free and for pay. The Knoppix CD will allow you to do the same thing, if you're able to boot from a CD.
TallCool1
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I thought it was 4GB for FAT32 and unlimited for NTFS. Not to offend anyone thats just what I thought....
No offense taken. Actually there is often some confusion about this. As far as I have been able to determine, one bit is reserved for offset (used to indicate whether seeking forward or backwards in a file), which limits an individual file to 2 GB on FAT32.
TallCool1
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ntfs,which makes it good for video editing
caperjack
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is that 2 GB for FAT32 or NTFS???
2 GB limit for Fat32. 2 terabytes (the maximum volume size) for NTFS, either version.
TallCool1
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