this occured with windows 2000, and I am pretty sure that it happened
exactly as described, but that was awhile ago I might have misremembered
something.  It probably also depends on the specific sequence of the
partitions.

Windows 2000 has a very finicky file system.  These days winows 2000 is
a lot less relevant but believe it or not it still gets used due to the
costs and incompatibilites with legacy apps.

Perhaps other versions of MS Windows don't have this problem.  However
out-of-order partition tables are actually quite rare so I doubt very
much that Microsoft spends significant time testing this scenario much
less fixing any bugs found (MS Word shipped with 20000+ documented
wontfix bugs because they weren't "common enough scenarios", as decided
by them, even though some of those bugs caused crashes and corruption of
documents).

If MS Windows is not known to have problems with out-of-order tables
perhaps it's because people avoid creating them...  ;-)

By the key point I am making is that any such partitioning scheme will
need careful and extensive testing with multiple os versions and types.
The complexity of the testing needed to ensure safe operation could
exceed the effort to write the actual code.

I do like the concept, but it may be safer to put the effort into
enabling GRUB to bypass the BIOS limitation.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/512670

Title:
  Enable creation of out-of-order partition tables to make Windows-
  interoperable USB disks

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