All versions of Windows 98 support FAT32.
Windows 98 supports FAT12, FAT16, FAT32, and ISO9660 (on CDs).
Yes, they do. Windows ME even supports Fat 32!
Windows 98 can be installed on a FAT16 or FAT32 partition (FAT32 is the best choice for disks larger than 512 MB, and supports long file names better).
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.
The last version of Windows Media Player that will run on Windows 98 is WMP9. WinAmp 5.35 is the last version of WinAmp to support Windows 98. The last version of VLC to support Windows 98 (officially) is 0.8.6. The latest version of Media Player Classic still supports Windows 98.
Fat16 and Fat32
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.
LG PC Suite 2.0.1.15 does not have a Mac version, it only supports Windows Operating systems. The systems are Windows Vista, Windows 98, Windows 2000 and Windows XP.
Windows NT is advance technology than Windows 98. Hence when you boot your computer using Windows NT you will be able to all FAT32 partition. However, If you use Windows NT file system like NTFS than you won't be able to access this from Windows 98. As Windows 98 can only access MS DOS/FAT32 kind of partitions.
However much the BIOS supports. Or, if you mean maximum partition size, then it would be: FAT12: 32MB FAT16: 2GB FAT32: 8TB
NTFS is a journaling file system, designed primarily for scalability and security. FAT32 is used in Windows 98 because Windows 98 requires MS-DOS to boot, and it would have been very difficult to port MS-DOS to boot off of an NTFS partition. Also, FAT32 has better performance on older computers and smaller hard drives. By the time Windows XP came out, computers were more powerful, and NTFS would actually perform better than FAT32 on the hard drives that were available by this time.