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Explaining File Systems: NTFS, exFAT, FAT32, ext4 & More và các hình ảnh liên quan đếnchủ đề này.

exfat và các Thông tin liên quan đến đề tài.
NTFS, FAT32, exFAT, ext4 và APFS chỉ là một số hệ thống tệp được sử dụng để tổ chức dữ liệu trên ổ đĩa lưu trữ. Video này phác thảo sự khác biệt giữa những …
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Từ khoá liên quan đến chuyên mục exfat.
#Explaining #File #Systems #NTFS #exFAT #FAT32 #ext4 #amp.
[vid_tags].Explaining File Systems: NTFS, exFAT, FAT32, ext4 & More.
exfat.
Chúng tôi mong rằng những Thông tin về chủ đề exfat này sẽ mang lại giá trị cho bạn. Xin chân thành cảm ơn.
"An exabyte is 1,000,000 terabytes, so in practice there's no file size constraint"
Call of Duty: "Hold my beer"
i use ext4 for everything.
ext4 is great because it supports hard links and sym links
Nonce
As I watch this channel I became a great fan of it. The things are elaborated very nicely n simply but on technical n scientific basis. Keep it up. You are doing great job.
Best Regards
Prof.Dr.Mustansar,
Consultant Dermatologist,
Malaysia.
Would be interested in a more in-depth look into ZFS and how it works seeing as it now seems to be used in a lot of NAS solutions
This video is amazing ! It gives a really good overview of file systems, their advantages and disadvantages. Thanks a lot for making this video. I hope I can't wait until you upload your next video.
Thanks !
Worth mentioning the fact that NTFS requires fragmentation.
Also, on GNU/Linux there is also BTRFS option, which is similar in its functionality to ZFS, but doesn't have weird oracle licensing.
Amazing work, Sir! All of your videos are PERFECT!
Nice channel I just came across while watching random videos on YouTube …
This is very helpful! Thank you!
what about a "file system limit" ?
Thank you <3
Extremely useful video
Could you make a video on a very important topic? Where to store all our data in a reliable and long lasting way? Something like nas, sony petasite, etc.
Like it thank you
now I know why my 1tera Hdd always convert it self to Raw Partition because it does no support ntfs intead exFat Thanks for this vere infomative video
Christopher, imagine my surprise when after watching your video I checked an important flash drive plugged into my computer and found that it was formatted to "msdos" file system. What does that mean? Mind you, this isn't something I've had around for twenty years. I just bought this drive back in 2019 or maybe even last year. It's a 64 GB Kingston, and based on your video I figured it should be formatted with the exFAT file system. I work primarily in Linux but this drive is for storage.
If I have a 2TB Western digital hard disk, should I format it as exaFAT? Then will it be able to use its WD password protection software on that exFAT system?
So should I format all my USB drive to exFAT, looks like this is the best as it can handle the biggest files.
Good video. But what about BTRFS ( butterFS )? Garuda Linux uses it, for example. ¨ BTRFS is a modern, Copy-on-Write (CoW) filesystem for Linux, aimed at implementing advanced features while also focusing on fault tolerance, repair, and easy administration. ¨, according to their website.
Nicely done as always.
Btw I also hit fat32 limit of 4GB file size, it was also some image in DVD era, I was using W98 side by side with XP and I wanted to had access to my drives on both systems(now its possible to R/W ntfs on W98), so I had formated every drive to fat32, and after some time things become biger and biger and that problem came out, I was wondering wtf is going on, trying many times, diffirent programs hahahha
Finally after many tries I figured it out that was fat32 limit experimentally.
OOPSBITCHOOPS
i get better understanding that with ntfs file size limit is 16EB, basically its a FAT64 which a x64 bit of Windows File Allocation System lol
just like how 32bit vs 64bit handles memory xD
I have 1 TB flash drive exfat iwant To convert it so ntfs but it takes 25 percent fornating in 25 hours ho to make it fast
A factor you didn't mention is the R/W speed of different formats. IMHO, exFAT is radically slower to read or write than NTFS, at least on the PC/Macs I have been using. Obviously there could be many factors involved, but exFAT is my first choice for compatibility, but the last for speed with flashmedia.
Very clear explanation, thank you for posting.