@PowerCertAnimatedVideos

Get 60% off System Mechanic Ultimate Defense with 30 days of FREE 24/7 Live Tech Support! Use code "PowerCert" at https://www.iolo.com/powercert

@rizwanarasheed

I've been in the IT industry - professionally since 1997. The information in your videos is precise and accurate. One of the best channels on YouTube for sure!

@ahmad-murery

I feel more confident when I know what I'm dealing with,
Thank you for your continued efforts In making high-tech topics look simpler.

@bluegizmo1983

One thing you should've mentioned is, exFAT is by far the best for portable drives. It doesn't have the file size limitations of FAT32, It's supported by 99% of devices made in the last 10+ years, and most importantly for portable drives is it does NOT require properly ejecting the disk before removal! I can't tell you how many times I've corrupted the files on a flash drive or USB hdd because it was using FAT32 or NTFS and I forgot to properly eject it before unplugging it.

@Techn0forlife

Quick, consise and straight to the point. I just started my first real job in IT and this really helps, definitely took notes on this, cheers.

@MegaGeorge1948

One more good feature in NTFS is Increased reliability. 

NTFS uses its log file and checkpoint information to restore the consistency of the file system when the computer is restarted after a system failure. After a bad-sector error, NTFS dynamically remaps the cluster that contains the bad sector, and allocates a new cluster for the data. It also marks the original cluster as bad, and no longer uses the old cluster. For example, after a server crash, NTFS can recover data by replaying its log files.

NTFS continuously monitors and corrects transient corruption issues in the background without taking the volume offline. This feature is known as self-healing NTFS, which was introduced in Windows Server 2008. (source: Microsoft)

@marcel_max

This video could not arrive at a better moment. Earlier today I was just asking myself if I should buy the exfat package for my synology NAS. After watching this I found out that in my situation I don't need it. Thank you!

@keltyll

Amazing! thank you. Can you please make a similar video about EXT4, BTRFS, ZFS etc?

@Michael_Livingstone

I love your videos as they’re to the point and presented in a simple coherent way. Thanks for making them!

@barneystinson35

Thank you sir. I am a computer engineer student and I have an exam tomorrow. This video in english is more understandable than my teacher's notes in turkish.🧑‍💻

@AntuNeelesh

A visual treat for technology people like me :) Thanks for yet another awesome video !!

@Mduduzi...Motloung

This Channel deserves a Ballon d`or !!!!!!

@О.Н-ю5л

чудове пізнавальне відео! дякую! процвітання каналу!

@willkill1713

Another amazing video. For sure, one of the most underrated channels of YouTube. It's a shame.

@HomeMadeBoards

Went to go buy a seagate and figured PCIe NVMe in an enclosure to be cheaper. Legit couldn't release this at a better time, thank you!!!

@alexandrenappez

Thanks for another good video. I would have added that NTFS was the file system introduced for
Windows NT back then. NT and consumer Windows merged around the time XP was released and NTFS became the file system used by all windows versions.

@Magidornwill

Thanks for the explanation that is understandable for an interested noob like me ^^

@johncunningham4820

To someone with very limited understanding of Computer Systems , this was  VERY useful information . Thank You .

@shrinidhig3672

Never understood File System so well before. Thanks. Plz make a video on apple file systems as well

@judeleon8485

Thanks a million. Your videos, as simple as they may seem, are very fundamental to understanding IT concept