NTFS read support has been in the kernel since 2.2. 2.6.0 supports read / write operations.
NetBSD, Windows, and Linux each support both FAT and NTFS file systems.
The NTFS file system is supported in Linux by both a kernel module and several userspace programs. It is not supported as a root file system and is not recommended for permanent file storage.
Pretty much any Windows system built around NT: Windows NT, 2000, XP, Vista, 7, and 8. Also, Linux has two NTFS filesystem drivers giving it support for NTFS.
If you are talking about accessing the partition from Linux, the kernel file system driver does not allow writing to NTFS partitions. You can write to the partition in Linux if you install the NTFS-3G file system. This is the only form of "write-protection" that should be on your system.
No NTFS is the only file system capable of encryption
ntfs
yes, the newer removable media can support ntfs permissions. Because window operating system has to be able to read the removable device. But be careful!
Log files The encrypting file system EFS Disk quotas
Under Windows I believe the only file system with full support for this is NTFS. On the Mac its standard HFS+ file system has always supported this. On Unix and Linux all native file systems supported this.
It depends on what filesystems your distro has available and can support. The basic mkfs will make you a EXT-based filesystem. However, mkdosfs (linked to mkfs.vfat) will make FAT filesystems. For those systems with NTFS support, mkfs.ntfs is also available.
different between fat and ntfs file system
Because NTFS is a bad system and macs are just simply too good for this NTFS system.