Well, any distro is going to have that problem. See, its the kernel thats holding you back, not necessarily the distribution. 2.6 is nearly official, so there may be hope soon. I haven't heard if they perfected NTFS support or not, but anything open source dealing with MS is usually buggy or temporary at best.Kawaii said:Ouch. Both my HDD's are using NTFS. Damn.
Ok, so are there any Linux versions that are compatible with NTFS? I'll take mostly anything.
catocom said:I must be missing something, or doing something wrong.
I can't see a very big performance difference between ntfs, and fat32.
I know there is a diff, in the security I guess, but for me
I like to run fat32 on everything, concerning windows.
It just seems to make life a-lot easier for me.
I notice startup times stay lower in NTFS than FAT32. But NTFS makes file recovery/virus removal a royal pain.catocom said:I must be missing something, or doing something wrong.
I can't see a very big performance difference between ntfs, and fat32.
I know there is a diff, in the security I guess, but for me
I like to run fat32 on everything, concerning windows.
It just seems to make life a-lot easier for me.
That's the truth. I use it for the security, though.I notice startup times stay lower in NTFS than FAT32. But NTFS makes file recovery/virus removal a royal pain.
I want to be able to use both in Linux, the 80gb for apps, OS and games, and the 120 for anime, mp3s, ISOs and movies. So i'd have to reformat both in order to be able to use both in Linux.chcr said:I don't understand. You have an 80gb and a 120gb drive. Why would you have to reformat both? Besides, you can see an ntfs drive, you just can't write to it.