Windows NT4 Service Pack4 and Windows XP Professional
NetBSD, Windows, and Linux each support both FAT and NTFS file systems.
Windows makes use of the FAT and NTFS file systems.
Windows NT 3.1 (incompatible with NTFS in 3.51 and higher)Windows NT 3.5 (incompatible with NTFS in 3.51 and higher)Windows NT 3.51Windows NT 4Windows 2000Windows XPWindows Server 2003Windows VistaWindows Server 2008Windows 7Mac OS X 10.3 and higher (read-only)LinuxeComStation (read-only)FreeBSD (read-only)OpenBSD (read-only)Other operating systems that do not include support by default but can read or use it with third-party software include:MS-DOS (with NTFS4DOS)Windows 95 (with DiskInternals NTFS Reader)Windows 98 (with DiskInternals NTFS Reader)Windows ME (with DiskInternals NTFS Reader)NetBSD (with FUSE)Solaris (with FUSE)BeOS (with FUSE)Haiku (with FUSE)QNX (with FUSE)
Most modern operating systems are not directly responsible for file management functions. Instead the operating system calls one of possibly several file management systems to provide these functions. This gives much greater flexibility and the ability to exchange files on different media (e.g. FAT, NTFS, HFS+, CD/DVD/UDF ISO-13346, Files-11).
This is dependent on which operating system you have. For example, Win95 uses FAT or FAT16, Win 98 uses FAT or FAT32, NTFS is on Win200, XP, Vista, 7 Mac OS X uses HFS+ And Linux-based OS's usually use ext4, ext3 or newer Btrfs, though can be installed on almost any filesystem in existence.
NetBSD, Windows, and Linux each support both FAT and NTFS file systems.
ntfs
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.
Windows makes use of the FAT and NTFS file systems.
FAT32 can be used by more operating systems then NTFS. In order to use NTFS the computer must be formatted with the NTFS file system. NTFS systems are able to read both NTFS and FAT32. FAT32 systems cannot read 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!
Hi! NTFS file system supports needed options.
ntfs
Short for New technology File System, one of the file system for the Windows NT operating system (Windows NT also supports the FAT file system). NTFS has features to improve reliability, such as transaction logs to help recover from disk failures. To control access to files, you can set permissions for directories and/or individual files. NTFS files are not accessible from other operating systems such as DOS.
ntfs
Fill form of NTFS>New technology File System
NT file system (NTFS)