Colif
Moderator
Bios should recognise Exfat as well, mainly as USB drives getting bigger, and finding an 8gb one will one day be hard to do.
It did not unfortunately, maybe just a Gigabyte problem or B550 problem. I tried multiple times.Bios should recognise Exfat as well, mainly as USB drives getting bigger, and finding an 8gb one will one day be hard to do.
Windows 11 no longer formats things to FAT32
Found a very old half GB stick and I get the option for FAT 32 there.HtG says it does:
How to Format a USB Drive to FAT32 on Windows 11 or Windows 10
Make it work with all your devices.www.howtogeek.com
Must be exactly that, because I just tried with an old 32GB drive and its there. With the 64 GB ones its not.its probably the size of the drive that made windows offer those 2, EXfat is for drives 32gb or over, as Fat32 is only 32bit and can only access so much space.
the horse's mouthWindows don't format USB drives bigger than 32GB to fat32, to do that you need an alternative tool. This one can help you, but you can use another if you like
Must be exactly that, because I just tried with an old 32GB drive and its there. With the 64 GB ones its not
Went straight to the third party app without reading the article.Yeah, the HtG article says:
"the built-in graphical formatting options on Windows only let you format your drives in FAT32 if they're 32 GB or less in storage capacity. (However, there's a command-line method and a third-party app to format drives larger than 32 GB in FAT32 format.)"
To be fair it showed up my C drive and my other SATA SSD. Wonder if I culd have put the BIOS file on the root of one of those and read the BIOS file straight?I can't find any indication anywhere that the BIOS will change what it accepts any time soon.
So you new PC might have same problem, unless you don't intend to ever buy a PC again.
The USB flash drive or hard drive must use FAT32/16/12 file system.
I prefer to hide my cables, not make them obvious
take hdd out and replace.. but I might just take it out