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.
No file system at all EXCEPT for FAT and FAT32 are supported by Windows 98
Windows 98 defaults to FAT32 on drives larger than 512 MB. For older drives, you can also use FAT16.
The original version of Windows 95 only supported FAT12 and FAT16. OEM Service Release 2 and later supported FAT32 as well.
FAT and FAT32. Most common is FAT32
fat32
You use My Computer & Windows Explorer to browse the file system on a drive in Windows XP.
Windows 2000 will automatically use the FAT32 file system
Windows XP and Windows 7 both use the same file system by default: NTFS.
No. They already use the same file system.
NTFS
NTFS
NTFS : Administrators typically use NTFS permissions to assign privileges on a Windows Server 2008 file server.
NTFS is standard
On a modern Microsoft Windows computer, the most frequently used file system is NTFS.
Windows 2000 supports FAT16, FAT32, and NTFS partitions.
Convert the volume to NTFS
Use system file checker to verify the version of all system files when Windows loads. Useful when you suspect system files are corrupted, but you can still access the Windows desktop. Command to execute it: Sfc with parameters.