New
#1
Formatting USB Sticks
Do most folks still format USB sticks as FAT32 fs? Or NTFS? I'm running a quad core with 16GB RAM on an AMD ATX motherboard.
Does it even matter?
Also, take a look at the poll.
Yes
No
Only with 64bit OS
Only with 32bit OS
Depends on what I'm using the stick for. Sometimes I use it to swap files quickly from Win 7 system to an Linux Mint system and that requires the format to be fat32 for compatibility. Otherwise I format with NTFS.
I guess I am much like metalmania31, it depends on how I am using them. But, most of mine are FAT32 because I use them primarially for linux utilities used on Windows, but I have a few formatted NTFS.
I've seen that Windows 7 can format USB flash drives in exFAT. It can work with fully updated Xp and vista systems though. Apparently, Microsoft I think is still trying to patent it. I guess it works better than FAT32, especially if it's a larger flash drive, say 16 gigs.
Your topic and poll seem a little unrelated. Formatting doesn't really have anything to do with Readyboost, per se. But, to answer, I usually format larger (2 GB+) drives as NTFS unless they are bootable, and I don't own any systems with less than 1 GB of system memory to make Readyboost useful.
I can't say I've had any issues. I format with NTFS just because I feel it is a better, more stable file system than FAT32. On those drives that I don't make bootable, I have need to access them outside of Windows.
FYI for everyone, It DOES matter. If you format them with Fat32 or by default they are formatted with FAT. Once you have so many files on the drive you can't put any more... even if you have 15gb left. You can only put so many files on the drive. I couldn't find the exact number but I can tell you from experience you can only store so many files on a drive when it's Fat32 (unless you have separate partitions) but NTFS I believe there is NO limit on how many files you can have on the drive.
It isn't limited by the number of files. It is limited by the amount of space being used, and that will depend on the size of the sectors. Anyone who tried saving a lot of .txt files to a floppy disk would learn this important lesson (painfully).