windows 95
Fat16 and Fat32
Yes, but you have to get the OSR2 release, which came out in 1997. It includes FAT32 support, USB support, etc.
All versions of Windows 98 support FAT32.
No NTFS is the only file system capable of encryption
Windows Vista does not officially support booting from a FAT32 drive, although it is technically possible. Vista supports FAT32 on Flash drives and hard drives, although it will not format a hard drive over 32 GB as FAT32.
FAT32 does not support compression of filesor folders
Yes you can. Unix understands both FAT32 and NTFS file systems.
XP and above are full NT systems with command prompt (ms-dos prompt) are with NTFS and all non nt systems are ms-dos FAT32 based
XP and above are full NT systems with command prompt (ms-dos prompt) are with NTFS and all non nt systems are ms-dos FAT32 based
File systems that do not support FAT32 include NTFS (New Technology File System), which is commonly used in Windows operating systems for larger files and improved security features. Additionally, exFAT (Extended File Allocation Table) is designed for flash drives and large file sizes but is not FAT32. Linux file systems like ext4 and Btrfs also do not support FAT32, as they use different structures and features tailored for performance and data integrity.
NTFS (New Technology File System) is not natively compatible with DOS, as DOS primarily uses FAT (File Allocation Table) file systems, such as FAT16 or FAT32. While some third-party tools may allow read access to NTFS drives from DOS, full compatibility and support for NTFS features are lacking. Consequently, users typically need to rely on modern operating systems for NTFS functionality.
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.