![]() ![]() Linux can not scan / repair a NTFS disk. (That’s still in progress, I need to move around dozens of TB’s) I reformat ALL my HDD’s to ext4, be it external or internal. That does not have a 4GB size limit, and windows can read it too. On USB drives with 8GB or more, I use exfat. ![]() ![]() I should (?) reformat NTFS disks to Fats32, ex3, or ex4? I used Paragon extfs on Winodws 7 few years ago. Windows can not read Linux ext formatted disks. Of course as VB guest Windows has a limited performance, but for those tasks I need it for, it’s enough.Īnd having a 17GB vdi file worths better than having a 60GB partition dedicated to Windows I need this ability occasionally, so the tools required for this are installed in the VB guest. DVD/Bluray authoring still doesn’t work on Linux. In case I need to touch an older project, I still may need to start my Vegas pro on Windows. I still may need Windows, and I have it as a VB guest, because: The big change here was to discover Davinci Resolve, which can work -and in fact it works for me quite well on Linux. That’s not something easy to find in Linux world. I’m a videographer, and for my work I need a powerful, usable NLE. Why did you keep a copy of Windows if you did? These were heavily pushing me towards Linux. Additionally the look and feel of Win10 always disgusted me. Most of them caused by impossible-to-diable-silent-updates, that broke something in my system. In that time it produced for me way much more inconvenience than Windows XP and Windows 7 together in the last 15 years before. What did you find out that you needed to change?Ī that time recent hardware upgrade forced to me to Widows 10 because of lacking Windows 7 drivers. Just realized there are some questions here… ![]()
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