
John Andersen schreef op 28-03-2016 19:28:
On 03/27/2016 10:50 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
No, not true. There was FAT. I have seen more XP machines on FAT than on NTFS.
Don't forget ReFS
Its sort of still NTFS underneath, But it seems like its a BTRFS wanna-be.
All of that is irrelevant here. If you install Windows 8 or 10, you don't even have the option to create a FAT partition. FAT is long gone, except for usb sticks and the like, which is what I indicated. I don't think Windows even mentions that it is using NTFS. This means the shadow volume copy thing is available for 99.99% of Windows users these days on their main disk at least, and it is also turned on by default for the main disk. And in a general sense, there is nothing special about that, I was just mentioning it (I guess) as a reference or example or point in case of another OS that also has it. No point to go into that, it is a base feature and it works as intended (well, most of the time) and it has a gui to it and you can browse the snapshots, etc. etc. For a windows user there is really no difference between "snapshot" and "system restore point". The system restore points are the only snapshots you normally have access to. Regards. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org