vinícius mota wrote:
He is the line of my /etc/fstab file which defines my backup disk,
with the label common
LABEL=common /home/vinicius/Desktop/common ntfs
auto,user,sync 0 0
I would suspect that it is more directly related to the fact that you
are writing to an ntfs partition. You can read from it at normal speed,
and Windows can read and write to it at full speed. This should
indicate that the BIOS, controller, and disk are fine.
I also have one ntfs partition on a SATA drive one of my systems, and it
has caused some problems. If I could find a reliable way to convert it
to ext3 without loosing data, I'd do it in a second!
--
Check out the website I've been cobbling together. It will never be done, but
it's a start:
http://lateralforce.no-ip.org
My blog, with commentary on a variety of things, including audio, mixing, equipment, etc,
is at:
http://audioandmore.wordpress.com
Staat heißt das kälteste aller kalten Ungeheuer. Kalt lügt es auch;
und diese Lüge kriecht aus seinem Munde: 'Ich, der Staat, bin das Volk.'
- [Friedrich Nietzsche]