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NTFS is not, nor has ever been journaled, which is why even today Vista requires ocational defragmentation.
I never saw chkdsk run in Win2000 whenever it went down, but that does not make NTFS as seen in all of the later NT based windows releases any more a Journaled filesystem then the Amiga's FFS.
Sorry to bring up an old thread like this, but I hate seeing disinformation.
Usually windows just say that it is getting ready for suspend mode and right after "everything" shutsdown it powers it self right back up
Piru wrote:@the_leanderQuoteNTFS is not, nor has ever been journaled, which is why even today Vista requires ocational defragmentation.Um, what does journaling have to do with need of defragmentation?
Piru wrote:QuoteI never saw chkdsk run in Win2000 whenever it went down, but that does not make NTFS as seen in all of the later NT based windows releases any more a Journaled filesystem then the Amiga's FFS.NTFS does have metadata journaling. Amiga FFS doesn't have any, not even atomic commits.
Piru wrote:QuoteSorry to bring up an old thread like this, but I hate seeing disinformation....
Piru wrote:@PainkillerQuoteUsually windows just say that it is getting ready for suspend mode and right after "everything" shutsdown it powers it self right back upI've seen this happen with certain older desktops. Usually disabling some USB wake up options cure it.
Matt_H wrote:Or they could just improve the efficiency of the damn thing so that it actually boots in 8 seconds, like another certain operating system we know...Talk about mixed up priorities. With the power of today's PC hardware, they should be ashamed of themselves that the OS is just as slow as ever, if not slower.
detz wrote:Doesn't windows do some caching of all the contents of the hard drives too during the boot in order to give the impression of instantly accessing directories etc?