Galera manera nessa "#$!%% ai .. sem ficar chingando .. affe ta parecendo briga de ATI vs Nvidia ..
vou colocar um texto aqui .. e pra esclarecer a duvida do carinha q nao conseguiu criar partiçao em fat32 EM RAID 0 .. EH POR CAUSA DO CLUSTER .. TEM Q SETAR 64KB OW MENOS ! MAIS QUE 64KB VC NAO CONSEGUE ACESSAR (convenhamos q testes mostram q 128kb eh o melhor valor para arquivos grandes jogos e sistema operacional)
entao lah vai .. pra quem nao acha q nfs eh mais seguro ..
FAT32
FAT32 is an enhanced version of the FAT file system that can be used on drives from 512 megabytes (MB) to 2 TB in size. The partition size limit is approximately 128GB. FAT and FAT32 offer compatibility with operating systems other than Windows 2000 and Windows XP.
FAT32 can be accessed by Win95B (OSR2, OSR2.1), Win95C (OSR2.5), Win98, Win98SE, WinME, Win2K and WinXP.
It cannot be accessed by DOS (prior to version 7.0), Windows 3.x and Windows NT 4.0 (without the use of third party utilities).
The majority of systems are formatted with FAT32 as the default.
NTFS
NTFS (New Technologies File System) has all of the basic capabilities of FAT, and it provides the following advantages over the FAT and FAT 32 file systems:
File security. Access rights can be assigned to files and directories, allowing users full access, partial access or no access at all to data on your hard disk.
Disk compression. File and directory compression can be performed directly without the need for third party utilities, saving space, while allowing for transparent access and operation to the user.
Support for large hard disks, with a theoretical limit of 16 ExaBytes, and up to 2 TeraBytes (TB).
NTFS supports Unicode, and natively supports long file names.
Disk quotas can be assigned, limiting the amount of disk space users can access on a partition.
Encryption. The NTFS 5.0 file system can automatically encrypt and decrypt file data as it is read and written to the disk.
NTFS can be accessed by Windows NT, Windows 2000 and Windows XP. Note that there are some differences between the NTFS used by Win2K/XP and WinNT; you need to apply Service Pack 4 to Windows NT in order to access NTFS5.
Fault tolerance: file system journaling. See below.
Mounted drives: attach volumes to an empty folder. Operates much like the Assign command from DOS.
Hard links: create an NTFS-based link to a given file.
Sparse files: assign and reserve hard disk space to specific files.
File Streams: multiple data streams are supported and accessible with NTFS.
para mais .. acesse
http://www.anandtech.com/guides/viewfaq.html?i=63
deem uma lida ..
e a respeito do nosso amigo q disse q MILESIMOS de segundo nao fariam diferença .. FAZ SIM .. se nao vc nao estaria defendendo o fat32 , pelo testes mostram fat32 eh milesimos de segundo mais rapido q nfts ..
e outra .. imagine um HD com varias partiçoes ...
|c:swap e windows||d:jogos programas|
a agulha no c .. vai ler o swap e o sistema (frequentemente ultilizado pelo HD) na mesma partiçao .. ow seja ela vai andar menos q fosse assim
|c:windows ||d:swap||e:jogos e programas|
a agulha vai ter q acessar a OUTRA partiçao q fica mais longe
a explicaçao pode ser bem escrota .. mais vc pensando um pouco . tipo .. nem precisa intender de computador para poder perceber isso ..