[multiboot-guide] master: What about my files? (a7c65de)

immanetize at fedoraproject.org immanetize at fedoraproject.org
Tue Jan 6 06:03:05 UTC 2015


Repository : http://git.fedorahosted.org/cgit/docs/multiboot-guide.git

On branch  : master

>---------------------------------------------------------------

commit a7c65de77d8658ab58ed655cd1819c24860ef2dc
Author: Pete Travis <immanetize at fedoraproject.org>
Date:   Mon Jan 5 21:27:03 2015 -0700

    What about my files?
    
    And <para>. That's needed too.


>---------------------------------------------------------------

 en-US/FAQ.xml |   26 ++++++++++++++++++++++++--
 1 files changed, 24 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)

diff --git a/en-US/FAQ.xml b/en-US/FAQ.xml
index 75213de..1addb4e 100644
--- a/en-US/FAQ.xml
+++ b/en-US/FAQ.xml
@@ -10,11 +10,33 @@
   <qandaset>
     <qandaentry>
       <question>
-        Can I install Fedora on my computer, and keep Windows?
+        <para>
+         Can I install Fedora on my computer, and keep Windows?
       </question>
       <answer>
-        Yes!  Fedora can coexist with Windows, other Linux distributions, and more.  Fedora provides a menu that lets you choose the operating system to use when you turn on your computer.
+        <para>
+          Yes!  Fedora can coexist with Windows, other Linux distributions, and more.  Fedora provides a menu that lets you choose the operating system to use when you turn on your computer.
+        </para>
       </answer>
     </qandaentry>
+    <qandaentry>
+      <question>
+        <para>
+          Can I access my files from Windows from Fedora?  What about accessing my Fedora files from Windows?
+        </para>
+      </question>
+      <answer>
+        <para>
+          You can easily access your Windows files from Fedora.  The <application>Files</application> application in Fedora Workstation, and most other graphical file browsers, will show Windows NTFS volumes for you to browse.
+        </para>
+        <para>
+          Unlike Fedora, Windows does not have native support for most filesystems.  There are third party drivers available that allow Windows to read some filesystems, like ext3 and ext4.  Windows does not currently support virtual block devices such as LVM, which is used for Fedora installations unless you specify otherwise.
+        </para>
+      </answer>
+    </qandaentry>
+  
+  
+  
   </qandaset>
+  
 </section>



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