UDF version 2.5 file system
UDF version 2.5 File System
Any file that will fit in the capacity of a DVD-R can be placed on it.
A type of file system that is not readable by windows
Solaris employs the file system called UFS (UNIX file system) for its native file system type.
VFAT File system......... Virtual File Allocation Table.
The file system type that windows server 2003 uses by default is NTFS5. This stands for native file system version 5.
The df utility displays a list of the directory hierarchies available on the file system. NFS is the file system type.
Some possible reasons include: 1. The computers you are trying the disc on do not have DVD drives. 2. The computers you are trying the disc do not support the type of disc you are using (DVD-R or DVD+R). 3. You are using a file system on the disc that the operating system can't read. XP, for instance, cannot read UDF 2.50 or UDF 2.60. Vista and OS X Leopard can, however.
Yes, so long as they are the same type of disks, for example; bluray would work with bluray.
The introduction of high definition discs saw two formats launched. Bluray is one and HD DVD was the other. The format war was won by the Bluray system and HD DVD was withdrawn in 2009. Both Bluray and HD DVD are high definition players but note that "HD DVD" is the name of the format and is confusingly close to the generic description of high definition disc players. Bluray and HD DVD are not compatible so a disc of one type will not play on the other format. There are a handful of dual format disc players but they were expensive and few were sold. If you have HD DVD discs then you need to hand on to an HD DVD player if you want to watch them. All high definition discs on sale now are Bluray and of course will need a Bluray player to play them.
You buy the game disc for your type of system and make an account on it.
exFAT is not a file type. It is a file system of the FAT family. FAT comes from file allocation table and originated with the early FAT12 file system used on floppies, then to FAT16, and with WIndows 98 OSR2 added the FAT32 file system. The extended FAT file system, called exFAT for short is the latest and was made available for the desktop with Vista SP1 in 2008.
ext3.