Linked by David Adams on Thu 22nd May 2008 16:24 UTC
Graphics, User Interfaces You'll find flash file systems used in personal digital assistants (PDAs), cellphones, MP3 players, digital cameras, USB flash drives (UFDs), and even laptop computers. This article looks at a couple of the read-only file systems and also reviews the various read/write file systems available today and how they work. Explore what the flash devices are all about and the challenges that they introduce.
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Still using fat
by buff on Fri 23rd May 2008 23:47 UTC
buff
Member since:
2005-11-12

I usually format my Linux USB flash drives as FAT 32. I am always mounting them on Windows PCs at work. Once I tried EXT format with no journal and then installed Ext drivers for Windows XP. It worked okay but was a little flakey at times on Windows.