I have a ssd and a hdd. In windows we usually install the os in ssd and keep rest of the files in hdd. As much as I have experienced most of the linux apps store their configs and files in /home. So how can I get speed like windows from ssd? Some people told me to mount a folder in /home that points to the hdd for better performance. Does it work? How to do it? What does it actually do?
Here’s some interesting reading for you…
Difficulty: ★★☆☆☆
1. INTRODUCTION
Microsoft Windows started its life as a graphical user interface on top of MS-DOS, a 16-bit single-user, single-tasking operating system that in turn originated as 86DOS, an unauthorized 16-bit rewrite (by Tim Paterson of Seattle Computer) of Digital Research’s originally 8-bit CP/M operating system. Both CP/M and MS-DOS were at the time developed for computers that did not support any other storage media than floppy disks.
Considering this legacy, Microsof…
Difficulty: ★★★☆☆
Introduction
As you should all already know by now, GNU/Linux is a FLOSS variant of the UNIX operating system design, and UNIX does not know the concept of drive letters, nor does it approach storage from the vantage of having different volumes. Instead, everything is mounted into a uniform directory hierarchy, so that regardless of what physical medium any particular group of files resides on ─ even if this physical medium is actually located in another computer across the …
system
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5 August 2023 06:34
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