Breaking the capacity of large disk packs

  
Not long ago, I used a USB flash drive to copy a 5GB HD movie on my friend's computer. My friend said that my USB flash drive may be in the wrong format and requires NTFS format to copy large files larger than 2GB. I think this is very easy. Anyway, there is no useful thing in the USB flash drive. Is it OK to format it? So, insert the USB flash drive into the USB interface of the XP system computer, open “My Computer”, right click on the drive letter representing the USB flash drive, select “Attributes”, and in the “General” tab page, see The U disk "file system" is indeed the FAT32 file system, but when it is formatted, it is found that only the FAT32 and FAT file system formats are available in the drop-down box of the file system, and there is no desired NTFS format. So what can you do to format the USB flash drive into NTFS format? 1. First open “My Computer”, right-click on the USB drive letter and select “Attributes”; 2. Select the “Hardware” tab and select your U disk in “Name”. Click <;Properties>; (Figure 1); 3. In the "Properties" dialog box that opens, select “Strategy", and then select “Optimize for improved performance> (Figure 2); Click “OK Exit, restart the computer; 5. Reformat the USB flash drive, then you can select the NTFS file system to format the USB flash drive. This article comes from [System Home] www.xp85.com
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