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#16
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Hello VanguardLH,
I/we just gave the hint, not the procedure. What I wrote there was just to vent my own frustration about having wasted time & energy at imagining what could have been wrong with my machine not showing NTFS as a "format this storage" option, and why the method of enabeling it is stuck so deep into the settings that you would not find it other than by obtaining specific information to it (read: using google), as well as warning other people running into the same problem (phew, a single sentence spanning five lines). It was not aimed at anyone here. To you and the others I'm just gratefull for your help. After getting a hint, and if you needed more info, you could your own online search :-) I did ! But only *after* I realized that there was/is nothing wrong with my OS and the problem must therefore lie somewhere else. And no, I did not expect you guys to "just tell me everything", but I surely didn't expect the OS to simply hide the NTFS option due to a (to me) more-or-less unrelated option hidden 6 levels deep. Hence my frustration. By the way, the Microsoft article provided by Zilbandy didn't work to convert FAT32 to NTFS on a USB drive? As the USB stick was empty I did not even consider using that method, as just reformatting would than the most efficient. Regards, Rudy Wieser VanguardLH schreef in berichtnieuws ... R.Wieser wrote: (after fixing the quoting indentation) The format is Fat32. It does return the correct free space, both in "windows explorer" as to a DIR command. Zilbandy (paraphrased), ...or convert the USB drive to NTFS. VanguardLH, You have run into a maximum file size supported by a particular file system. The maximum file size in FAT32 is 4,294,967,295 bytes (4 GiB - 1). You will have to slice up the file into multiple parts to continue using FAT32 or convert the USB drive to NTFS. Well, not *that* easy: while the format selection was easy enough to find in the context menu it didn't give me an NTFS option (wtf?) .... It turns out you first you have to right-click the drive - "properties" - tab "hardware" (yeah, Hardware!) - select the USB stick (again) - "properties" (again) - "Policies" and than select "optimize performance" (aka: enable caching) before the formatting-option NTFS will be available for the stick (not that they mention that there). You thought that that was all ? No sirree -- If you try to format the drive thru the "disk management" console (under settings - administrative tools) you stil won't get the NTFS option (huh?!). That one only pops up when you right-click the drive in "file explorer" and than select format. Go figure. I/we just gave the hint, not the procedure. We wouldn't know your expertise level and it's a waste of time to recite what someone might already know, plus some folks take offense at you offering what they consider simpleton advice as though you've insulted their intelligence. If they come back and ask "how" is when more info can be provided but this is not a chat room with instant feedback so it could be hours or days before there are replies. Sometimes a hint is all that is needed and the poster may not even come back with an update after finding the solution so the respondents get no feedback if their suggestions helped or not. There are a lot of drive-by posts. Someone might tell you to run 'chkdsk' but figure you knew 'chkdsk /?' to get its command-line arguments, you could look in Windows help, or you could look it up online. After getting a hint, and if you needed more info, you could your own online search on, say, "format usb drive ntfs" to find: http://www.ntfs.com/quest22.htm http://www.ehow.com/how_6177473_form...ives-ntfs.html http://www.online-tech-tips.com/comp...rmat-usb-ntfs/ As you see, I'm naturally verbose. Reading skills and attention spans have waned, especially since the introduction of the Web, and many Usenetizens get dazed or tune out when having to read more than a hundred words. A reply like this one is beyond their communication skills. By the way, the Microsoft article provided by Zilbandy didn't work to convert FAT32 to NTFS on a USB drive? I found several articles that reinforce Zilbandy's suggestion. Or did you not even try it? |
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#17
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R.Wieser wrote:
VanguardLH, I/we just gave the hint, not the procedure. What I wrote there was just to vent my own frustration ... Okie dokie, that's pretty much what I figured. You thought it would be straight forward but had to delve into an obtuse solution. I usually bracket my undirected outburst by: rant vent here /rant It's pseudo-HTML to indicate you are venting in that section. I picked up on this after seeing others use this trick. |
#18
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VanguardLH,
You thought it would be straight forward but had to delve into an obtuse solution. The solution itself *is* straighforward: Just reformat the stick NTFS style. That that option was silently(!!) blocked, only to be un-blocked by doing something in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying 'Beware of the Leopard' is what got me frustrated (funny in the book, not so much on my computer). I usually bracket my undirected outburst by: snip Only after you responded to that I recognised that it could have been read as a personal "you failed to inform me" attack. At the moment of writing I was not aware of it, and it certainly wasn't my intention. But yes, maybe adding a tag like that would not have been a bad idea. I'm already accustomed to using smilies to indicate intent / take the sting off of some stuff I say, so why not HTML tags too ? :-) Regards, Rudy Wieser -- Origional message: VanguardLH schreef in berichtnieuws ... R.Wieser wrote: VanguardLH, I/we just gave the hint, not the procedure. What I wrote there was just to vent my own frustration ... Okie dokie, that's pretty much what I figured. You thought it would be straight forward but had to delve into an obtuse solution. I usually bracket my undirected outburst by: rant vent here /rant It's pseudo-HTML to indicate you are venting in that section. I picked up on this after seeing others use this trick. |
#19
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From: "VanguardLH"
David H. Lipman wrote: By default... * If a drive is less than 32GB then it is formatted using FAT32. * If the drive is greater than 32GB then it is formatted using using NTFS. USB drives come pre-formatted using FAT32 for the widest compatibility under different operating systems. Since FAT32 partitions can be up to 2 to 16 TiB in size (depending on sector size), pretty much all USB drives, so far, will come with FAT32 partitioning by default. There are a couple USB drives that come pre-formatted with NTFS but that is not the norm. Good point. { I always format them no mattrer what. } -- Dave Multi-AV Scanning Tool - http://multi-av.thespykiller.co.uk http://www.pctipp.ch/downloads/dl/35905.asp |
#20
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"R.Wieser" wrote in message ...
Hello All, I just tried to copy a 6.2 GB file onto a 16GB usb memory stick, and got an "disk full" message. Could someone tell me what the problem is / how to solve it ? XPsp3 Regards, Rudy Wieser Format it? |
#21
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On 29/10/2014 21:21, Sasquatch Jones wrote:
"R.Wieser" wrote in message ... Hello All, I just tried to copy a 6.2 GB file onto a 16GB usb memory stick, and got an "disk full" message. Could someone tell me what the problem is / how to solve it ? XPsp3 Regards, Rudy Wieser Format it? Format alone is not good enough. Format it yes but make it NTFS format *NOT* fat32 format. |
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