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- Apr 2, 2009
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- MBP 3,1 2.4GHz, 2GB Ram, 160GB Hdd, OS X Server 10.5.6
After running the Bootcamp Assistant, there was a 32GB partition called "BOOTCAMP" mounted, it was FAT32. I installed Windows, and during installation I formatted the partition to NTFS. I've done this several times before and normally Leopard would recognize the partition as NTFS.
But, this time it still thinks that it's a FAT32 partition, and it still reads BOOTCAMP. I've since changed the name of the drive, and it doesn't affect my Windows installation at all. But Disk Utility sees it as a 32GB Fat32 partition that has no files. Leopard recognizes other NTFS partitions like thumb drives and such, and I've installed Paragon NTFS and NTFS-3G (not at the same time) but neither solved the problem. I ran ntfsfix, and it told me to run chkdsk, but there is no such command.
Doing the same thing and expecting different results is called insanity, but what is it when I actually get different results?
But, this time it still thinks that it's a FAT32 partition, and it still reads BOOTCAMP. I've since changed the name of the drive, and it doesn't affect my Windows installation at all. But Disk Utility sees it as a 32GB Fat32 partition that has no files. Leopard recognizes other NTFS partitions like thumb drives and such, and I've installed Paragon NTFS and NTFS-3G (not at the same time) but neither solved the problem. I ran ntfsfix, and it told me to run chkdsk, but there is no such command.
Doing the same thing and expecting different results is called insanity, but what is it when I actually get different results?