Navigacija
Lista poslednjih: 16, 32, 64, 128 poruka.

kingstone G2 8GB usb flash problem

[es] :: Storage :: kingstone G2 8GB usb flash problem

[ Pregleda: 2209 | Odgovora: 3 ] > FB > Twit

Postavi temu Odgovori

Autor

Pretraga teme: Traži
Markiranje Štampanje RSS

igonni
bg

Član broj: 111693
Poruke: 80
*.dynamic.sbb.rs.



+1 Profil

icon kingstone G2 8GB usb flash problem11.10.2009. u 11:21 - pre 177 meseci
imam kingstona ovog od 8gb kapacitet mu je 7.45gb i sad kad ka poonim
pojedinacnim fajlovima mogu da napunim do 7.45 medjutim kad hocu da
stavim image fajl koji je 4.12gb inace je window 7 ultimate aio fajl
nema sanse da iskopira na flash cao iako je prazan totale sa prostorom
od 7.45 slobodnog mesta sta da radim?probao sam i format i nista i dalje
daje poruku the is file is to large for destination system ????
neka pomoc??
 
Odgovor na temu

calexx

SuperModerator
Član broj: 71794
Poruke: 20046



+1651 Profil

icon Re: kingstone G2 8GB usb flash problem11.10.2009. u 13:44 - pre 177 meseci
Formatiraj flešku kao ntfs jer fat32 može da prihvati fajlove do 4GB.
 
Odgovor na temu

igonni
bg

Član broj: 111693
Poruke: 80
*.dynamic.sbb.rs.



+1 Profil

icon Re: kingstone G2 8GB usb flash problem11.10.2009. u 13:51 - pre 177 meseci
hvala odradio sam..
 
Odgovor na temu

Bata
Branimir Nikolić
Beograd

Član broj: 7232
Poruke: 202
93.87.105.*



+181 Profil

icon Re: kingstone G2 8GB usb flash problem14.10.2009. u 21:31 - pre 176 meseci
Using NTFS for USB Flash pen drives

USB Flash memory drives (also known as pen drives or memory sticks) are normally formatted using the FAT or FAT32 file systems, as are most removable drives. NTFS is generally considered to be a better file system if you use Microsoft Windows, so wouldn't it be better to reformat your flash drives so they use NTFS as well?
Write caching

It's perfectly possible to format USB Flash drives and memory cards using NTFS, but in Windows XP and Vista you must first enable write caching. This is disabled by default, with good reason. Caching means that data due to be written to the drive is held in memory, sometimes for a long time after the write took place. Many removable drives and memory cards were corrupted under older versions of Windows because people removed them without using the "Safely Remove Hardware" icon on the task bar, which forces any cached data to be written to the drive. So you should only enable write caching for removable drives if you're sure that you will remember to use the safe removal process.
How to enable write caching for removable drives

* Open My Computer
* Right-click the drive and click Properties
* On the Properties dialog select Hardware
* Select the physical drive (all drives will be listed) and click Properties
* Select Policies and click Optimize for Performance
* Click OK to close the property dialogs.

Disadvantages of NTFS for Flash drives

Once you have enabled write caching for your flash drive, you can go ahead and format it as NTFS. However, we consider NTFS to be the wrong choice for Flash memory drives drives for several reasons:

* Portability: the drive will be unreadable by computers running Windows 95, 98 or Me, Linux, or any other non-Windows device.
* Longevity: NTFS will shorten the life of the drive. It is a journalling file system, which means that it logs changes, not just the end result, causing more writes to the drive. It also logs last access times for files, so even a read causes a write access. Flash memory has a lifespan of only about 100,000 writes.
* Ease of access: NTFS records the owner of a file, so you are likely to see “Access denied” messages if you try to access the file on another computer. This could be regarded as a benefit, but it's actually just an inconvenience, as the data is not encrypted. If you want to secure the data on your USB memory sticks from prying eyes you should use encryption.
 
Odgovor na temu

[es] :: Storage :: kingstone G2 8GB usb flash problem

[ Pregleda: 2209 | Odgovora: 3 ] > FB > Twit

Postavi temu Odgovori

Navigacija
Lista poslednjih: 16, 32, 64, 128 poruka.