Sunday, December 17, 2017

Performance difference NTFS Linux and NTFS Windows


I need to format a disk to install Windows 8 on it (single boot). I cannot do it from Windows (I have only Ubuntu for now).
So my questions are:


Will the disk formatted to NTFS with Ubuntu be slower than if I had formatted it to NTFS from Windows (the drivers are not the same as far as I know) ?


Or can I just simply format to NTFS from the Windows 8 dvd ?



The drivers might not be the same but a formatted NTFS partition is a formatted NTFS partition. What ever the tool you use.


By the way: The Ubuntu driver is for mounting and writing to a NTFS partition already formatted as NTFS. In general you format a disk from the GParted software, not Ubuntu itself (though you can install GParted in Ubuntu and use it from there). If the GParted NTFS formatting tool was not up to standard Windows would consider it a corrupted file system and refuse to start from it.



Or can I just simply format to NTFS from the Windows 8 dvd ?



That question is off topic ... but the answer is: of course. You can format from any installation media since one of the 1st things to do is to set up your partition for a file system structure that that system needs to run on.


No comments:

Post a Comment

11.10 - Can't boot from USB after installing Ubuntu

I bought a Samsung series 5 notebook and a very strange thing happened: I installed Ubuntu 11.10 from a usb pen drive but when I restarted (...