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Knocklive
7 months ago

1. Open Disk Management:

  • Press the Windows button + X and select Disk Management.

Two. Delete existing partitions:

  • Find your USB stick in the list.
  • Right-click any partition and select Delete Volume.

3. Create a new partition:

  • Click on the “not assigned” storage space.
  • Choose “New Simple Volume” and follow the assistant.

4. Format the USB stick:

  • Select FAT32 or NTFS as a file system and close the wizard.
deruser1973
7 months ago
Reply to  Knocklive

an ext4 file format is not displayed, you use Diskpart or you make it via Linux

gonzo1233
5 months ago
Reply to  deruser1973

It’s stupid that Windos is so incapable of popular partition formats.

Here I boot the free Linux Mint ISO from another USB pen, with GParted (which can be accessed via the start menu) the pen can be reliably partitioned into 16 partition formats. That’s IT.

Anyone who has Linux running on a PC is fine.

Miax2000
5 months ago

How do I change the file system of my USB stick?

In the Devices and Drives section, right-click the flash drive and select the Format option. Use the File System drop-down menu and select the desired option. Use the default selection in the “Size of the Assignment Unit” drop-down menu.

and take on a stick only the format FAT 32 because the sogood all the operating system underused

deruser1973
7 months ago

with Diskpart:

https://www.diskpart.com/de/windows-10/diskpart commands-unter-windows-10-use.html

deruser1973
7 months ago
Reply to  Danielsen9

Open cmd and insert the commands…

only click is not

deruser1973
7 months ago

the link – did you even read that?

do this, otherwise the stick for the ton or you do it on Linux – then you can click…

noname68
7 months ago

in the data carrier administration, however, it should be seen, there you can also edit it

deruser1973
7 months ago
Reply to  noname68

not if Linux was on it, because that cannot read Windows…