FAT16, FAT32, and NTFS.
The 3 major file systems are FAT, FAT32 and NTFS
Windows XP natively supports FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, and NTFS. Other file systems, such as HPFS, JFS, ext2/3, and ReiserFS can be supported through an IFS (Installable File System).
There are several file systems employed by both operating systems, thus you need to be more specific when asking for a comparison. Windows most commonly uses NTFS these days, although older versions used FAT. There are several popular file systems for Linux, depending on usage. The most common is ext3 or ext4, although ext2, ReiserFS, JFS, XFS, and several others all have fairly common usage.
Fat16 fat 32 ntfs4 ntfs5
windows XP, windows Vista, windows 98
If by computer systems you mean operating systems, then: 1) Windows 2) Macintosh 3) Linux
ext2, ext3, ReiserFS, are some native file systems
Windows Boot Manager (bootmgr)File,Windows boot loader (winload.exe)File and the Boot Configuration Data (BCD) File
windows service pack 3
This depends on operating system. Windows uses two bytes per line, and most other operating systems use one. This means there will be 6 bytes for Windows, or 3 bytes for everything else This is because Windows uses a line ending of <CR><LF>, while other operating systems use just <LF>.
The Sims 3 is supported in Windows 10. However, whether the game will work or not still depends on your computer's specifications.
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