Well U Have To Suck It! LOL!
If you are talking about accessing the partition from Linux, the kernel file system driver does not allow writing to NTFS partitions. You can write to the partition in Linux if you install the NTFS-3G file system. This is the only form of "write-protection" that should be on your system.
Super block is supposed to be the first sector of any file system that can be mounted on Linux operating system. It is supposed to contain information about the entire file system in that partition. It has magic number to specify which file system is used in that partition and other parameters to help read/write to that file system.
Yes. The FORTRAN write command output's data to a file.
"Mounting" means to enable read / write access to a partition.
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A floppy disk where everything on it has been removed / deleted, to clean it up for new stuff. In order to format a floppy, you need to write blank tracks onto it, each containing the necessary sectors, sector headers, and inter-sector and intra-sector gaps. This is done using a special command of the floppy controller which writes a full track at a time. You then need to write data to the floppy to provide the logical file system. In the FAT 12 file system, that consists of the boot record, the file allocation table, and the root directory. If you intend to boot from the floppy, then you need to write the rest of the boot record, and the required operating system files, usually IBMBIO.SYS, IBMDOS.SYS, and COMMAND.COM. If the floppy has been previously formatted, it is possible to skip the physical format part where you write the tracks - just rewrite the file allocation table and the root directory, and the system files if needed, and you will delete all of the files and directories on the floppy. Often, however, it is better to do the complete format, particularly if you are using the floppy in a different drive.
BIOS setup
Whoa.
For most DOS commands you can write COMMAND /? and you will be presented with a list of possible choises. eks. FIND /? Regards.
Both commands are used to allow two users to communicate on a Unix system when logged in (kind of an early instant messaging system). The 'write' command causes a line to appear on another user's terminal screen only after the sending user completes the entire line and presses the enter key. The talk command splits the screen into two segments, allowing the two users to talk at the same time. It sends each character as the user types it, unlike 'write' which only sends complete lines. You can see exactly how quickly a user types with 'talk' but not with 'write'.
It is a command. It means "write".
escriban