I'm curious to what extent all of you experts out there would go to in order to maximize "portability" between Linux and Windows platforms. Would you dare go as far as partitioning your /home partition to NTFS or vfat? (and Red Hat's telling me vfat's only good for 2 gigs, but I have a drive formated to 10 gigs?)

Basically, I want to keep my MP3's and documents in a place that both Windows and Linux can access them. Also, if anyone out there is familiar with Flightgear Flight Stimulator, I would like to keep the base packages on a common drive, so I can run the Windows and Linux versions without having to keep separate sets of files (which are identical except for the binaries). I'm sure someone's managed to do this before, if not with Flightgear, then perhaps with Quake or something. Is it wise to even try? Is stability going to be an issue?

-Nick


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