\fBimagex capture\fR and \fBimagex append\fR do not have separate "normal" and
"NTFS" modes on Windows. There is simply one mode, and it uses the Windows API
to capture NTFS-specific information, including alternate data streams, reparse
-points, hard link, and symbolic links. So, you essentially get the advantages
+points, hard links, and file attributes. So, you essentially get the advantages
of the "NTFS mode" documented above, but you can capture a WIM image from any
directory, not just an entire NTFS volume. This is mostly the same behavior as
Microsoft's ImageX.