F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems The project is progressing at a slower pace than expected for its completion in Microsoft.

The project is progressing at a slower pace than expected for its completion in Microsoft.

The project is progressing at a slower pace than expected for its completion in Microsoft.

M
Maleroi
Junior Member
11
10-22-2023, 05:35 PM
#1
It has been available since 2012 but hasn't reached the level needed to fully replace NTFS yet.
M
Maleroi
10-22-2023, 05:35 PM #1

It has been available since 2012 but hasn't reached the level needed to fully replace NTFS yet.

H
Hughed
Junior Member
18
10-24-2023, 01:51 AM
#2
Microsoft mostly added these capabilities for file servers, not for starting programs.
H
Hughed
10-24-2023, 01:51 AM #2

Microsoft mostly added these capabilities for file servers, not for starting programs.

B
bunjyman13
Member
69
10-24-2023, 09:57 AM
#3
It won't replace NTFS since it wasn't part of Windows 10 anymore. ReFS is essentially Microsoft's version of btrfs. The key problem remains the inability to boot. Compression and deduplication weren't available until server 2019, which means it still misses some essential capabilities.
B
bunjyman13
10-24-2023, 09:57 AM #3

It won't replace NTFS since it wasn't part of Windows 10 anymore. ReFS is essentially Microsoft's version of btrfs. The key problem remains the inability to boot. Compression and deduplication weren't available until server 2019, which means it still misses some essential capabilities.

A
asafverypro
Junior Member
13
10-25-2023, 09:52 AM
#4
They probably don’t intend to switch to NTFS anytime soon. It’s been around for a while now.
A
asafverypro
10-25-2023, 09:52 AM #4

They probably don’t intend to switch to NTFS anytime soon. It’s been around for a while now.

A
azheng2044
Member
64
10-25-2023, 12:11 PM
#5
We're not using NTFS 1.0, it's been updated several times
A
azheng2044
10-25-2023, 12:11 PM #5

We're not using NTFS 1.0, it's been updated several times

T
TheJKLM
Member
110
10-25-2023, 06:32 PM
#6
It indicates the NTFS version in use is 3.1, which isn't a major change.
According to the Wikipedia page, NTFS supports versions up to 3.2, so 3.1 fits within that range.
T
TheJKLM
10-25-2023, 06:32 PM #6

It indicates the NTFS version in use is 3.1, which isn't a major change.
According to the Wikipedia page, NTFS supports versions up to 3.2, so 3.1 fits within that range.