Just to add a bit to BobTheFisherman's reply. Yes, you can use either FAT32 or ExFAT formatting when you wish to share files with Windows users. The big difference would be the drive size would need to be 32GB or smaller to use FAT32. No such limitation for ExFAT. (Well, actually...
Just disconnect and connect a FAT32 USB drive a few times without using the remove button and then do the same to a NTFS drive. The FAT32 drive will be screwed while the NTFS drives requires a run of chkdsk at the most. I wouldn't safe anything I wish to keep on a FAT32 disk. ...
Try formatting the drive with NTFS or FAT32. 5. Try CHKDSK Command Open Command Prompt (Admin) and type: chkdsk X: /f /r /x (Replace X with your USB drive letter) If you get an error like "Cannot open volume for direct access," the drive might be faulty. 6. Use a Low-...
Step 2: Select the SD card and allow the software to scan for lost files. Step 3: Preview the found files and recover the ones you need to a different location (e.g., hard drive, USB flash drive, etc.), not to the SD card itself. #2 Change SD Card Drive Letter Note: This met...
So, I decided to test this to see if it’s true. It’s true, but it is worse than that. When a PCIe SSD is formatted using ExFAT: Ventura 13.1 writes25% slowerthan Monterey. Ventura 13.1 reads35% slowerthan in Monterey! Also, once a drive is formatted as APFS, the pr...
*** NOTE: Be VERY EXTREMELY careful when you select the drive, accidently select the wrong drive will not be NXP responsibility!!! *** I have a 4GB standard SD card to USB adapter connects to PC. Type list disk to list all the drives. Type select disk # to select the dis...
On rebooting my tower system (which also has a built n EZ drive) firstly my MegaSTE wouldn't see the Conners, then it wouldn't see anything over SCSI! It turned out to be the AdSCSI card where the ribbon cable decided to slip out from the connector on the AdSCSI card. All is ...
So, I decided to test this to see if it’s true. It’s true, but it is worse than that. When a PCIe SSD is formatted using ExFAT: Ventura 13.1 writes25% slowerthan Monterey. Ventura 13.1 reads35% slowerthan in Monterey! Also, once a drive is formatted as AP...