IIRC it autodetected and mounted my drives ever since 7.something.
The NTFS problem was more with regard to my pendrive Fedora which despite being set to either english or german (can't remember which doesn't matter anyway) somehow thought a repository server somehwere in south Asia or wherever was the best choice for me (might have been South America which would have some logic to it if the OS was indeed set to german).
You have no idea how hard it is to figure out, that the reason why the driver you most certainly installed via the packetmanager doesnt work, even though you did everything right and your networktraffic is at idle after doing so, is becuase the repository is hosted on a 960baud modem and your internet line is not supposed to do nothing.
All Fedora had to offer at the time was a privately run repo that only had the drivers for older kernel version. (yay repositories)
I've never actually run into any of these problems since my stabs at trying Linux never lasted long enough to get to the point where I'd install Matlab. but even though I'd like to be able to set the location of every single application and game on my PC manually instead having all of them in the same place.
The whole storing things in user directories that has gotten so popular lately has become a complete nightmare for me when doing backups to reformat my PC. No I not only have to check the game's folder but also "My Documents" and the hidden "Application Data" folder in my account folder instead of just doing why I do with LFS which is copy paste the whole game.
Also thanks to LFS' fairly userfriendly implementation of what is essentially DRM you can always create tons of different LFS folders (at ~300MB a pop it will hardly eat up your drive) one for each specific use. I usually have a race folder a drift folder a mucking about with tweak and other mods folder and several others including stuff luke folders with lfs preconfigured to suit my wheel at either 720 or 270°.
Probably but it was only after activating the Nvidia drivers that the 640 bug showed its ugly arse (and it truely is disgusting... almost every gui menu that might help you fix the problem is too tall to fit into a 480 res... why it doesnt default back to a sensible resolution like 1024 is probably something only linux geeks understand).
Also ever single time I've used Ubuntu with several different monitors the 75 or 85Hz is use always end up being some random Numer at around 50 in the Gnome resolution switch utility.
They can be except that the fairly useful Application that helps you set your monitor up within X (which btw has a profile for mine) only ever appears on screen in Ubuntu if you mess you xorg conf up while desperately trying to get all 5 buttons on your mouse in working order (don't get me started on this one). Presumably it cas also be started from the console if you know its name; why its not accessible via the system settings menu like in Fedora nd all you get instead is that completely useless resolution switcher will forever remain a mystery to me though.