> I like to know at hand what file is on which disk. That used to work for A: vs C: back in the days of floppys, but what part of "E:" tells you which disk it is? At best you get to assume that E: and D: are different disks, but the names don't tell you which is which.
> Even though, it would not be bad to call them USB0: or HDD0:, > just a bit more complex. That's better, indeed. But the "0" still makes it unclear (which disk is 0 and which is 1?). To make it more clear, I think it's important to give (as much as possible) human-chosen names to the disks (for that reason I use LVM to partition my disks, where I can label my disks and partitions, although those labels aren't always reflected in the mount points, so they're not always visible in the actual names of the files that reside in them). Stefan