![]() ![]() Seeing as windows phone is practically dead I don't think you will find a better option even the top end apple iPhones won't do what you want. This is the best your going to get from a mobile phone with android on it. All your photos and videos are still accessible via the Google photos app since it will be logged into your Google drive account. If you want it shoot 4k video then my suggestion would be let it store it on the internal storage and let it backup to Google drive, you can then clear the space once it has done this on your internal storage. My suggestion to the op is what are you trying to do that requires this amount of storage on a phone? I'm wondering if perhaps you are using the wrong device for the job. This is probably also why this method does not work for the op. Apps like the camera etc will not store photos or video on it as it won't show as an available drive. When mounted via this app you can only access the drives through the internal android browser or through total commander. For the record I personally I have only tested Paragon with external drives connected via the usb c port of the Nokia 8. Again the Paragon software in the play store does allow you to mount an exFat formatted disc for both read and write. This will format the card to Fat32, not exFat as it's not supported. If you insert a large micro SD card into the Nokia 8 it will say it is corrupted and offer to format it for you. It is not part of AOSP Android which is what Nokia use therefore it is not supported. Now we come to exFat, this is just an extension of Fat32 to allow larger file sizes, again this is a Microsoft disc format, a license fee has to be paid to be able to use it, most Android vendors do not pay for the license fee therefore support is not added for it. Paragon produce a tool that enables NTFS volume to be mounted as read only, it does not allow you to write to it, even if it did allow you to write to it I would not recommend it. It is not supported at all by the Android OS and I don't know of any vendor that has added support either. A license fee has to be paid to Microsoft to use this disc format. How To Format Volumes To ExtFS Or NTFS Using Terminal Read in: Deutsch The final commands should be modified appropriate to your disk and partition. This is because NTFS is a Microsoft disc format designed for Windows based operating systems. First of all none of them have supported NTFS. This is from what I understand and what I have deducted from my own usage of the Nokia 8 and other Android devices that I have owned. You are unfairly criticising Nokia for something which is generally unsupported across the entire industry sector (now that MS have abandoned the industry), and which is unsupported by the vast majority of Android vendors. The SD Association's standards are far from useless and quite relevant they ensure excellent multi-vendor and multiplatform interoperability. For the internal storage case (including "adopted" SD cards, used to expand internal storage on Android), where FAT's characteristics could actually be problematic, it uses the Linux ext4 filesystem. Android as a whole (not just Nokia) does not support NTFS because it is quite unnecessary and irrelevant to the platform. FAT and exFAT are not "a step backwards", they are still the current industry standard for media cards, with the major advantage of being widely supported. NTFS does not give any significant benefit for that scenario. ![]() with "None", the Paragon ExtFS for Windows would not mount the drive.SDXC with exFAT format (on an appropriately speed-rated card) is more than capable of handling 4K video. We did two version of HD Deliverables - one formatted ext2 and one formatted NTFS for two different Theaters - one of the theaters requested a NTFS formatted drive and it went faster in transfer time on the PC, (not using compression method), but still took about 8-9 hours! Total data was around 130GB On a side note, what partition format do you recommend? we chose MBR for this one. tar format directly to the drive (in Ubuntu) that we were shipping to the theater and then uncompressing directly back to that same drive then deleting the compressed file. I dont know how this happened but some day I discovered that the relation between file names and their contents was completely scrambled. The method that worked the fastest for us was to compress the DCP-o-Matic folder to. With Paragon ExtFs : creates files and folders with the uig/gid '0' on the drive, so once back to Linux, all files belong to root:root. I know part of the bottleneck is the massive amount of small files (135K+) for a 90 minute movie. Less than 1MB per second, actually much less (<30Kb at some point) when trying with Firewire800 and USB2.
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