windows 65me and 2k gold drivers.
Do you wish to enable large disk support (Y/N)? If you respond Y then Fdisk assigns the FAT32 file system to the drive. Otherwise, it uses FAT16.
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.
Incremental: Windows 9x/Me/NT/2000/XP Differential: Windows 98/NT/2000/XP
I don't think there is an upper limit on hard drive size. However, the Windows 9x family use FAT32 filesystem for the hard drives which limits file size to 4GB.Windows 9x & XP cannot support memory (or RAM) larger than 4GB.It's all to do with the 32bit operating system. 2^32 = 4294967296 (which is 4gb).**Windows 9x does not support drives larger than 137 GB unless third-party software provided by the hard drive manufacturer is used (Andrews, Jean, "A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, sixth edition, comprehensive," 2007 Thomson Course Technology).
no.. only win 2000 and later supports raid..
all version after win 98..
Windows 9x is a generic term referring to a series of Microsoft Windows computer operating systems produced from 1995 to 2000, which were based on the Windows 95 kernel and its underlying foundation of MS-DOS,[4] both of which were updated in subsequent versions. The first version in the 9x series was Windows 95, which was succeeded by Windows 98 and then Windows Me, which was the third and last version of Windows on the 9x line, until the series was superseded by Windows XP.[5]
137 gb...... Read your textbook! No!
9x is the lowest common multiple. (9x * 1 = 9x) (x * 9 = 9x)
(9x)2 +9x/(45x)2 +81= 9+9x/86
9x - 8 = 46 9x = 46 +8 9x= 54 9x/9 = 54/9 x= 6
Windows versions 1.x-3.x, 9x, ME are DOS-based; NT, 200x, XP, Vista are not.