• Matt
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    4 months ago

    Plus Linux doesn’t limit you in the number of drives, whereas Windows limits you from A to Z. I read it here.

    • @[email protected]
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      94 months ago

      You can mount drives against folders in windows. So while D: is one drive, D:\Logs or D:\Cake can each be a different disk.

    • @[email protected]
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      4 months ago

      For people who haven’t installed Windows before, the default boot drive is G, and the default file system is C

      So you only have 25 to work with (everything but G)

      • Fonzie!
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        24 months ago

        Almost, the default boot drive is C:, everything gets mapped after that. So if you have a second HDD at D: and a disk reader at E:, any USBs you plug in would go to F:.

              • Fonzie!
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                14 months ago

                The boot files go into C:, not G:.

                Windows can’t operate if you did that, it doesn’t let you.

                  • Fonzie!
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                    14 months ago

                    Fijn article, thanks for sharing!

                    Still, I don’t get why’d you do that, all my windows installation automatically put boot files onto C: and did not allow me to touch them afterwards.
                    G: also seems completely arbitrary, and I’m the majority of windowa setups wouldn’t exist or be an external drive.
                    Simple as.