Delp
December 6th, 2005, 10:59 AM
Hello:
I have found out , that partitions with ntfs system are read-only at the moment (at least an easy way). It was quite hard to found this (I read maybe 50 post), because i thought it was one of this linux difficult things to do, and i was searching all kind of howtos and troublesooting guides.
I suggest that the filesystems in linux could be introduced in the guide, and thus the incompatibilities, for example with ntfs. I don't think that it's too much for non-expert users since in windows it is one of the first things you learn (if you go one step beyond watching films, of course:) ).
I know there is a nice explanation in the wiki, but i still thing that a reference, even short could only make good.
Greetings.
I would do it, but english it's not my native language and i haven't learned enough to explain it to others. I can translate it's needed.
I have found out , that partitions with ntfs system are read-only at the moment (at least an easy way). It was quite hard to found this (I read maybe 50 post), because i thought it was one of this linux difficult things to do, and i was searching all kind of howtos and troublesooting guides.
I suggest that the filesystems in linux could be introduced in the guide, and thus the incompatibilities, for example with ntfs. I don't think that it's too much for non-expert users since in windows it is one of the first things you learn (if you go one step beyond watching films, of course:) ).
I know there is a nice explanation in the wiki, but i still thing that a reference, even short could only make good.
Greetings.
I would do it, but english it's not my native language and i haven't learned enough to explain it to others. I can translate it's needed.