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Right click on My Computer. Go to Manage. Select Disk Management on the left. Find the bar on the right which has your flash drive's partitions. Right click them both and do Delete. After that, make a new NTFS partition in the free space taking up the capacity of the drive. Walla.
Quote from: jrgp on July 30, 2008, 01:07:57 amRight click on My Computer. Go to Manage. Select Disk Management on the left. Find the bar on the right which has your flash drive's partitions. Right click them both and do Delete. After that, make a new NTFS partition in the free space taking up the capacity of the drive. Walla.NO use fat32
Quote from: a-4-year-old on July 30, 2008, 06:56:27 amQuote from: jrgp on July 30, 2008, 01:07:57 amRight click on My Computer. Go to Manage. Select Disk Management on the left. Find the bar on the right which has your flash drive's partitions. Right click them both and do Delete. After that, make a new NTFS partition in the free space taking up the capacity of the drive. Walla.NO use fat32But doesn't that just give the flash drive compatibility for Windows Me and older? Plus, NTFS gives the option for much longer file names, longer disk labels, and file compression..
Quote from: jrgp on July 30, 2008, 07:03:26 amQuote from: a-4-year-old on July 30, 2008, 06:56:27 amQuote from: jrgp on July 30, 2008, 01:07:57 amRight click on My Computer. Go to Manage. Select Disk Management on the left. Find the bar on the right which has your flash drive's partitions. Right click them both and do Delete. After that, make a new NTFS partition in the free space taking up the capacity of the drive. Walla.NO use fat32But doesn't that just give the flash drive compatibility for Windows Me and older? Plus, NTFS gives the option for much longer file names, longer disk labels, and file compression..he would only need the file compression, since its only 1 gig NTFS has no speed advantage. Fat32 is compatible with just about every operating system, and it won't waste time with security checks.Flash drives are generally fat32
Quote from: a-4-year-old on July 30, 2008, 07:17:42 amQuote from: jrgp on July 30, 2008, 07:03:26 amQuote from: a-4-year-old on July 30, 2008, 06:56:27 amQuote from: jrgp on July 30, 2008, 01:07:57 amRight click on My Computer. Go to Manage. Select Disk Management on the left. Find the bar on the right which has your flash drive's partitions. Right click them both and do Delete. After that, make a new NTFS partition in the free space taking up the capacity of the drive. Walla.NO use fat32But doesn't that just give the flash drive compatibility for Windows Me and older? Plus, NTFS gives the option for much longer file names, longer disk labels, and file compression..he would only need the file compression, since its only 1 gig NTFS has no speed advantage. Fat32 is compatible with just about every operating system, and it won't waste time with security checks.Flash drives are generally fat32That may be, but NTFS will always be more reliable than fat32 because it is a journaling file system. Meaning, with each transaction of data with the partition, a log of it is stored in a journal. If something gets fecked, like the drive is disconnected really fast without unmounting it first, it will just replay the contents of the journal the next time you decide to use it, making the chance of data loss much less lower. On the other hand, if you're using fat32, you have a much higher probability of being screwed.
Walla.
I fail at life.
Quote from: jrgp on September 30, 2010, 03:36:50 pmOnly anime shows I've felt any interest in over the years are Pokemon (original TV series) and various hentai.so clearly jgrp is a goddamn anime connoisseur. his opinion might as well be law here.
Only anime shows I've felt any interest in over the years are Pokemon (original TV series) and various hentai.
Best Admin: jrgp, he's like the forum mom and a pet dog rolled into one.
And that wont cause any problems? when my default is currently set to FAT....?