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Converting to NTFS |
Jeffrey - Feb 22, 2004 |
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Tagrineth | Feb 22, 2004 | |||
You can upgrade the file system to NTFS with no ill effects at any time, if I'm not mistaken. |
schi0249 | Feb 22, 2004 | |||
The following link is from Microsoft and tells you how to convert your drive without reformating. I used it and encountered no data loss. Hope it helps: http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?...kb;en... |
antime | Feb 23, 2004 | |||
You can always run Captive... or mount the drives under Windows under VMWare. |
Tagrineth | Feb 23, 2004 | |||||||
You can still dual boot with no issues at all. The only catch is, only Windows NT OSes can work with NTFS. IIRC one single Linux kernel can *read* NTFS, but none can write it yet. |
Alexvrb | Feb 24, 2004 | |||
Jeff, you should try posting more in your original thread. Have you tried using VirtualDubMod yet? |
antime | Feb 24, 2004 | ||||
The Linux NTFS Project driver... can read NTFS drives perfectly, and you can overwrite files as long as the file sizes are the same. Using that driver and one of the many ext2 drivers for Windows is much more convenient for transferring data (IMO, anyway). |
it290 | Feb 24, 2004 | |||
Heh, yeah, any (not ancient) kernel with support compiled can read it easily. I do the 'small fat32 partition' thing because in my experience the ext2 solutions for Windows are slow (and can't write well), because Linux can write to fat32 perfectly, and because I have an intense dislike for ext2. |
antime | Feb 24, 2004 | |||
There are also ReiserFS tools... available. Write support is not important, as you can always read the data under the other OS. I used to have a FAT partition for this purpose, but this way is much simpler. There are also other advantages, such as only having to store one copy of files you want to access under both OSes (documentation, mp3s etc.) |
ExCyber | Feb 24, 2004 | ||||
Thanks, hadn't heard about that one... |
Jeffrey | Feb 25, 2004 | ||||
I got VirtualDub 1.5.10 and I can't get it to work at all. I select AVI capture and I get a frozen screen; when I try to cancel it, I crash the program and it shuts down. Pinnacle won't load... VirtualDub crashes... the built-in movie maker won't recognize the pinnacle card. It seems like I can't capture video with anything except MGI Videowave 4. I'll stick to that, but I haven't tried to capture anything longer than 10 minutes yet because it only captures raw video. I can't find a program that will compress as it captures. I will look for "VirtualDubMOD" that you mentioned. |
antime | Feb 25, 2004 | |||
Start by uninstalling all and any video/audio codecs you have, especially if you've installed one of those crap "codec packs" that are floating around. |
Jeffrey | Feb 25, 2004 | |||
how do I isolate the codecs to know which to uninstall? |
Alexvrb | Feb 26, 2004 | |||
If you don't have a codec PACK installed, you probably don't have to worry about that, but you can dig around in your computer and remove individual codecs if that is the problem. Exactly what model card is this again? You should be able to get other programs to capture video for you. You might want to even give the trial version of Dr. Divx a shot. |
Jeffrey | Feb 26, 2004 | |||
Why would a program install with no problem... (I installed pinnacle studio 8 in Oct.) and crash on a future installation (I had to do a system restore in January) ? It is, afterall, the same computer and software. STudio 9 will also not install. It crashes as the registry is being altered. What are the possible reasons this would occur? Please note: the program wouldn't install even in Safe mode. |
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