2018

>2018
>you have to manually install a driver that lets you write to NTFS drives

Why has it not occurred to them to put something like that in by default

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Do that many people actually have NTFS drives they need to write to?

something something avoid ntfs if it's possible

If you're coming from Windows that formats everything as NTFS by default then yes

Nope
Last time I had no problems mounting it
It's handy for extern HDD's

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I know to now, I didn't five years ago when I started filling up this 2TB HDD though.

Does Windows even supports anything else? I mean besides FAT.

I'd assume ext4 would work with windows

Ext3 does ext4 does not

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That's a definite no, didn't try that with botnet 10 tho.

>having choice is bad now
And on other news, OP is still a faggot.

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Yup, there are EXT4 drives for Windows, but they are 3rd party.
Every major OS has cross R/W drivers available for most major filesystems.

Debian has never been focused on usability. Most Linux devs, Debian included, don't particularly care about essentially quality of life things. Hence why Linux has only a fraction of a percent of the desktop market share. It's good as a minimal system for Linux veterans and that's it.

...and almost all the world's servers

Oh no it's so inconvenient to install a driver one time! Or include non-free in your repos. Windows never makes you install anything ever right everything is oob right?

Has exFat which is nice for larger drives.

Read:
>It's good as a minimal system for Linux veterans

>using Debian
>2018

What should I use in the year 2018

>during install process
>you have the option if you wish

>t. never used debian or any form of linux

Because Debian is made by freetards for freetards.
Why do you think you even have to manually install your wifi driver on Debian? Here's a hint: It's a proprietary blob.

where?

ExFat works for Mac, Linux, windows and supports large data transfers

It's generally a good idea to leave out things most people won't need

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