NTFS (New Technology File System)
I think it is not the file system that is limited. It is version of Windows 7. It should either or both start edition and home.
FAT32
If you are installing windows XP with Windows 9x or me than the I would recommend you to use FAT32 as if you use NTFS than you wont be able to access Windows XP with NTFS partition. If you are installing Windows XP with Windows NT or Windows 2000 than you can use any partition type. But I would recommend to use NTFS.
Win2K is based on the same file system called as NTFS as of NT. But Win2K can also be set up using FAT32 file system a predecessor of NTFS. NTFS allows us to use long file names and is much faster than FAT32 file system.
Windows uses 4 file systems: FAT, NTFS, exFAT, and ReFS. "Linux" supports dozens of file systems, there are too many to mention. The differences between them are massive and specific to the file system in question. For a proper answer you need to read http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_system . It is incorrect to say "the Linux file system is faster than Windows" because it's dependent on the data, and of course because there is no "Linux file system." It's incorrect to say "The Linux filesystem is more/less secure than the Windows file system" for the same reason. Drive encryption is available in both Windows and Linux. To the average user, there is no functional difference.
NTFS is the file system that windows XP uses; I know that much. NTFS can handle bigger files than FAT32. FAT32 can handle 2GB files maximum. (So I'm told)
Windows 7 is an operating system. A Mac is a computer. A Mac can run Windows 7. The two things are not comparable.
Windows 95 OSR2, Windows 98, and Windows Me include an updated version of the FAT file system. This updated version is called FAT32. The FAT32 file system allows for a default cluster size as small as 4 KB, and includes support for EIDE hard disk sizes larger than 2 gigabytes
yes, because it has better, just about everything than mac's normal stuffAnswerThat varies from user to user. Windows and OS X are similar enough that Mac users usually don't mind working on the PC operating system, despite its being less stable.The Windows file moving feature is better than the Mac's, but system maintenance is much easier under OS X than Windows.Often, people prefer whatever platform they learned on, or use most often.
Fat32 volumes have a minimum size of 512 MB so its not that and FAT file systems are most efficient on volumes smaller than 256 MB, but NTFS is the preffered file system of windows xp so its either FAT or NTFS you pick i am leaning towards NTFS
I think anything is better than windows defender.
Windows 98 supports both the FAT16 and FAT32 file systems. The FAT32 file system will support drives up to 2 terabytes in size, while the FAT16 file system will support drives up to 2 gigabytes in size.