-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 The Wednesday 2007-05-02 at 10:01 +0200, Morten Bjørnsvik wrote:
AFAIK FAT32 has an upper limit of 127GB. which means you need lots of partitions.
What? Acording to the wikipedia, the limit is 8 Tera bibytes (8 TiB) - although if you format it from windows the limit is lower: | In theory, this should support a total of approximately 268,435,456 | (2^28) clusters, allowing for drive sizes in the range of 8 tebibytes | with 32K clusters. On Windows 95/98, due to the version of Microsoft's | ScanDisk utility included with these operating systems being a 16-bit | application, the FAT structure is not allowed to grow beyond 4,177,920 | (< 2^22) clusters, placing the volume limit at 127.53 gigabytes.[4]. A | limitation in original versions of Windows 98/98SE's Fdisk causes it to | incorrectly report disk sizes over 64GB.[5] A corrected version is | available from Microsoft. These limitations do not apply to Windows | 2000/XP except during Setup, in which there is a 32GB limit.[6] Windows | ME supports the FAT32 file system without any limits.[7] - -- Cheers, Carlos E. R. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.5 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Made with pgp4pine 1.76 iD8DBQFGOJhTtTMYHG2NR9URAkLTAJ4wrk2Qm5h2dd1g7B35t+Rje6P4tACgiotq IuN47hRLJqtyF/l3mlN5nG4= =fwFE -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----