Comment on YouTube is taking down videos on performing nonstandard Windows 11 installs
the_riviera_kid@lemmy.world 6 hours agoNever happens unless the drive is unformatted or a format windows can’t read. And if it is unformatted you get a pop up telling you so and an offer to format it which after that point it mounts on boot everytime without any interaction needed at all from the user. If it is already formatted it just automatically assigns the next available drive letter and mounts it. Linux just does nothing until you dig around in context menus and even after you format it it still won’t auto mount until you dig around through more menus or go through the ridiculous ftsab bullshit.
BCsven@lemmy.ca 5 hours ago
Not true, if you format a NTFS or fat in windows, then remove drive letter, it won’t auto Mount, same I’d you format it in Linux to a windows format and add to your PC, it prompts for a drive letter.
As for Linux, your user session defaults determine if it automounts or not. Mine USD set to automount, so you can see in this screen the 80gig drive was auto mounted, but you can turn off USD and use specific mount options.
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the_riviera_kid@lemmy.world 5 hours ago
What desktop environment/distro are you using? It would be nice to be able to skip the fstab run around and just click a button.
BCsven@lemmy.ca 4 hours ago
Running Tubleweed with Gnome, and the App is Disks. The user session defaults are accessed via dconf editor and you can set your system wide default for auto mounting, or manually tweak each drive via disks.I
Yast Partitioner was other screenshots, also has options to do the same if you run KDE tumbledweed, or you could install Disks.
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the_riviera_kid@lemmy.world 4 hours ago
Hey thanks! this is actually helpful. Why KDE can’t just have this as well is a mystery but oh well I’ll try Gnome.