Microsoft planning to replace NTFS in Windows 8

Started by pctech, Jan 17, 2012, 20:13:32

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.


Niall

Flickr Deviant art
Art is not a handicraft, it is the transmission of feeling the artist has experienced.
Leo Tolstoy

pctech


Rik

Rik
--------------------

This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

esh

I'm sure you all miss FAT32, right? ;)

The joys of cross-linked files! Missing hard-drive space! Corrupted file tables...

Yeah, FAT32 needed replacing. I guess the question is, does NTFS? I've found it pretty good, especially with the journal system in Win7. Not a single corruption as of yet. I stupidly once plugged in a Win XP NTFS drive into a Win 2000 PC though and it thought the entire drive was corrupted, fixed it, and then all the files were gone. Urk.
CompuServe 28.8k/33.6k 1994-1998, BT 56k 1998-2001, NTL Cable 512k 2001-2004, 2x F2S 1M 2004-2008, IDNet 8M 2008 - LLU 11M 2011

Technical Ben

Same here. Although I did antecedently delete a spare drive off of a "linked" drive portion table. Which ended up deleting the entire partition, not just the spare space. :(
But 3 days later I managed to rebuild the files and file tables. :)
I use to have a signature, then it all changed to chip and pin.

pctech

Quote from: esh on Jan 20, 2012, 09:31:47
I'm sure you all miss FAT32, right? ;)

The joys of cross-linked files! Missing hard-drive space! Corrupted file tables...

Yeah, FAT32 needed replacing. I guess the question is, does NTFS? I've found it pretty good, especially with the journal system in Win7. Not a single corruption as of yet. I stupidly once plugged in a Win XP NTFS drive into a Win 2000 PC though and it thought the entire drive was corrupted, fixed it, and then all the files were gone. Urk.

That sounds odd as Win2K was NT 5.0

Steve

It was the on disk format that was different in Win 2000 i.e. NTFSv3.0 . XP and onwards NTFSv3.1. The NTFS.sys driver in Win2000 was v5.0
Steve
------------
This post reflects my own views, opinions and experience, not those of IDNet.

pctech

Ah that explains it.

2000 had pretty much been and gone before I needed to know about that kind of stuff.