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NTFS: Revision history


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17 August 2024

16 August 2024

  • curprev 20:4320:43, 16 August 202484.119.16.74 talk 91,657 bytes +8 Timestamp can be only 64 bit to allow signed durations. Try to set a 64 bit timestamp, it doesn't work: https://pastebin.com/gWwcc3dH. Look at the aleady mentioned documentation for SYSTEMTIME: "The year. The valid values for this member are 1601 through 30827." undo

14 August 2024

9 August 2024

8 August 2024

  • curprev 22:4622:46, 8 August 2024Guy Harris talk contribs 90,920 bytes +470 →‎Scalability: Put back the statement about the MBR maximum partition size, with a real reference from the Wikipedia page that was improperly used as a reference before, and with a qualification that it applies to drives with 512-byte sectors. Use the Wayback Machine for another reference with a recently-dead link. undo
  • curprev 20:2420:24, 8 August 2024HiB2Bornot2B talk contribsm 90,450 bytes −24 There is a *significant* debate about whether or not NT even stood for "New Technology" originally or that was simply a marketing gimmick. Even if the original meaning of NT was "new technology," Microsoft has not used the words "New Technology" in ages. They have simply used the two letters of NT. This is not outside the norm for Microsoft, as XP had no actual meaning either, but was marketed (in backronym style) as eXPerience. undo

5 August 2024

12 July 2024

8 July 2024

30 May 2024

18 May 2024

17 May 2024

11 April 2024

18 March 2024

1 March 2024

24 February 2024

15 January 2024

7 January 2024

29 November 2023

24 November 2023

6 October 2023

  • curprev 07:3207:32, 6 October 2023Guy Harris talk contribs 89,779 bytes −112 For the first use of that reference, the reference doesn't appear to say anything about NTFS being the default file system type, so remove it. For the second use of that reference, the reference doesn't appear to say anything about physical sectors and NTFS, just FAT16, so move it. Fix the title of the reference, and give the website. undo
  • curprev 07:1807:18, 6 October 2023Guy Harris talk contribs 89,891 bytes 0 Punctuation before references. undo

18 September 2023

13 September 2023

  • curprev 16:1116:11, 13 September 2023DOSGuy talk contribs 89,891 bytes +1 Anonymous user changed this to 63-bits, without updating date range, citing https://pastebin.com/raw/2jL8W2hW. No explanation of link; presumably code leak of Windows XP/2000/2003? Microsoft claims it's 64-bit (https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/sysinfo/file-times). Past versions of Windows may limit to 63-bit, but current or future versions could support 64. Like FAT limit of 2107 being limited to 2099 by Windows, this would be an implementation limit rather than a format limit. undo

29 August 2023

13 August 2023

12 August 2023

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