On Saturday 16 June 2007 14:49, Alexey Eremenko wrote:
Hi Ken Schneider
read:
The primary advantage to this technology is no need to repartition a hard drive at all. A very welcome feature to win-noobs alike.
The partition structure is independent of the type of file system created on those partitions. I.e., it is not necessary to repartition a drive (that's already partitioned) in order to install Linux. Now, if what you want is to have both Linux and Windows installed on a given partition, that's another thing. As far as I know, there's no overlap between the directories used by Linux and those used by Windows, so if Linux could operate with a root file system that is NTFS, then this should be feasible. As far as my limited understanding goes, NTFS is sufficient to support a root file system, but I can't say for sure whether that is true. Clearly, the kernel would need to incorporate the NTFS-3G driver so the kernel and the running system could write to its NTFS root volume.
-- -Alexey Eremenko "Technologov"
Randall Schulz -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org For additional commands, e-mail: opensuse+help@opensuse.org