Questions on Size,Size on Disk, and NTFS in Win2k

igowerf

Diamond Member
Jun 27, 2000
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I'm new to Windows 2000 so bare with me, please. When I right click on a file and look at it's properties, the dialog box gives me two file sizes: Size and Size on Disk. I noticed that my files are taking up much more disk space than they're supposed to. I assume this is what SiSoft Sandra refers to as "slack space"? I have a basic understanding of FAT32, and it seems like A LOT of space is wasted, especially when there are a lot of small files. Will converting to NTFS help any?
Also, if I convert to NTFS, will I still be able to share files over a network with Win98 machines? I'm worried that Win98 machines won't be able to "see" the files.
Finally, I have two hard drives in my system. One drive is strictly for files and documents. The other drive has the Windows installation and my program installations. If I do use NTFS, should I convert both drives or just one?
Thanks a lot.
 

Pariah

Elite Member
Apr 16, 2000
7,357
20
81
"Will converting to NTFS help any?"

Yes, quite a bit.

"Also, if I convert to NTFS, will I still be able to share files over a network with Win98 machines?"

Yes, you will.

"NTFS, should I convert both drives or just one?"

If you only use win2k on the machine, convert both. If you dual boot, you shouldn't convert either.
 

potz

Senior member
Feb 22, 2001
651
0
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i agree with pariah. one thing to keep in mind is that it's easier to recover data from a fat32 partition in case things mess up.
 

SUOrangeman

Diamond Member
Oct 12, 1999
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When accessing files across a network, filesystems are transparent. You'll never know if its FAT, NTFS, Samba, NFS, etc.

-SUO