How to format an external hard drive for vista and snow leopard?

I want to format an external hard drive to attach to Airport Extreme base station to us with Snow Leopard and a PC with Vista. What format should I use for read/write access for both?

I use NTFS for my external drives being used on both Macs and Windows. To get the Mac to write to NTFS, you need a separate program. I use Paragon for Mac software. It works behind the scenes. There are also some free things that do the same thing but I found them cranky and unreliable. YMMV.
Windows can not read any of the Mac disk formats without additional software.. FAT32 is fine but is extremely limited.
For the last year, I have had absolutely no problems on any computer, Mac or Windows.

Similar Messages

  • Advice on how to format an external hard drive for a MacBook Air

    I have an external USB hard drive plugged into a 64GB MacBook Air. How should I format the hard drive so that when I run out of room on the small 64 GB SSD drive on the MacBook Air, it will start putting some iTunes or other files onto the external hard drive? I only put iTunes and other small music files on the MacBook Air in order to save room. I do have iTunes set for iCloud.

    You cannot format a drive so that files will be automatically put on that drive when you run out of room on another drive. Transferring the files must be done specifically by you. You will need to learn how to manage free space on the SSD because 64 GBs is a bit small for much more than OS X.
    Drive Partition and Format
    1. Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Security button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
    6. Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to several hours depending upon the drive size.

  • External hard drive for iMac with snow leopard and window XP

    I have snow leopard with windows XP ON MY MAC. WHICH EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE SHOULD I USE

    Any make and model of any size will work. But if yoyu plan on using it for both Windows and Mac OS X it needs to be formatted FAT32 or exFAT.

  • HT1338 how to format an external hard drive for MacOSX

    I have a new Fantom hard drive, but ut is formatted with NTFS file system.  How do I format it for my mac mini?  The instructions from Fantom say to use the Disc Utility...but also warn to reformat with HFS.  Will this be done when I chose Disc Utility, or do I need other software?

    55heyjude wrote:
    ok...the Apple store tech says just to format using the Disc Utility...
    And that is exactly what mende1 said as well, he just gave you a little more of the steps than the Tech did, thank him and format your disk.

  • Formatting LaCie External Hard Drive for MAC and PC

    Hi,
    I just recently purchased a LaCie 500 GB Hard Drive from the Apple Store in order to back up and store most of my PC (Window) files. Most of my files that I need to back up are on CD, DVD, and USB mini drives. I was thinking of transferring the files through my MacBook Pro but I'm not sure how to partition the hard drive, since most of my files are generated from PC's and I would need to connect the hard drive to a PC in the future anyway.
    From what I understand, the files that I save in the Windows partition will only be recognized when on a PC, and the same for the MAC. But what about simple compatible files that are read cross platform, such as Word documents? Would I still only be able to access each file depending on the platform and the partition?
    Is there a way that I can just partition it into a single storage space – as how servers store data, regardless of whether it’s a PC or MAC file? I’m also wondering what would happen if I were to plug it into my laptop first? If it doesn’t ask me to partition the drive on my PC, will it ask me when I plug it back into the MAC afterwards? And if I partition it then, what would happen to my data?
    Any help would be greatly appreciated!
    Thank you

    Hi, njoay
    I just moved to Mac from Windows last week onto a new MBP. I purchased a Lacie 500GB ruggedized drive. Here is what I know and tried:
    1) If you format the Lacie in Mac format, then you can't use it on a Windows machine without software eg MacDrive.
    2) If you format the Lacie in NTFS, you can only read from it when connected to Mac without other software.
    I work a lot with VMWare, so I need the LACIE to be able to connect to both PC and MAC. I found a solution from another MAC user: "Paragon NTFS for Mac OS" (see http://www.paragon-software.com/home/ntfs-mac/) which you can purchase for US$39.
    This is what I did:
    1) connect my Lacie to my PC and formatted it in NTFS format.
    2) Installed Paragon NTFS onto my MAC
    3) Connected LACIE to Mac.
    Here are the results:
    1) Connection with USB2.0 from Lacie to Mac - it works (can read and write to LAcie formatted in NTFS)
    2) Connection with Firewire 800 from Lacie to Mac - it does NOT work. The disk gets ejected. I have logged a support call with Paragon on this issue and am waiting a reply.
    3) Connection with Firewire 400 from Lacie to Mac - have not tried it yet.
    Hope the above helps.

  • Formatting An External Hard Drive For Windows And Mac

    So here is the problem I'm running into. I have a 160GB external HD Passport from Western Digital. When I format it for the Mac, it won't show up on my Windows XP computer at work. If I don format it in Disk Utility as FAT, it won't allow me to transfer large files in OSX.
    Is there a way I can get the best of both worlds?

    An interesting & refreshingly honest comment (from the author?) about SL-NTFS at http://mac.brothersoft.com/sl-ntfs.html:
    "Any encountered problem come from the Apple driver and not from the Preference. If you often need to write on NTFS disk, I recommend you to look for a better solution."
    The story behind the story: NTFS is a proprietary file system owned by Microsoft, which doesn't make all its characteristics known to outside developers. Thus, all methods of writing to it rely at least in part on reverse engineering unless they are provided as a part of Windows itself. I'm not entirely sure what the comments about Snow Leopard having this by default disabled capability actually mean, but both the above quote & the fact that it isn't enabled in Snow Leopard as shipped make me wonder how prudent it is to rely on it for routinely saving important data.

  • Formatting an external hard drive for Mac and Windows

    Hello,
    I just bought a brand new Seagate Expansion Desktop Drive (2TB) and am trying to work out how to format it. I want to move all my photos and movies to it from my laptop so i have more space. I have a Mac OS X 10.5.8 laptop but i also wanted to make sure it was compatible with other Windows computers in case i need to use it on someone else's PC.
    I've read through a few posts over the net and i am getting confused as i'm not IT-intelligent at all. I've seen there are possibly 4 different format types.
    Any help would be much appreciated.
    Thank you!

    Answered here: Formatting brand new external hard drive

  • How do i format an external hard drive for use on both windows and mac book air?

    how do i format an external hard drive for use on both windows pc and mac book air?

    Use exFAT on the PC.
    (71374)

  • I found information on how to transfer my library to a new computer. I am going to use an external hard drive for this and transfer my itunes folder to the new computer.   I will then download and install a new version of itunes on my new computer.   My q

    I found information on how to transfer my itunes library to a new computer. I am going to use an external hard drive for this to transfer my itunes folder to the new computer.
    I will then download and install a new version of itunes on my new computer.
    My question is this. When I do this, will itunes have all my album artwork for all my library? My library has a lot of my own music and I have spent quite a bit of time copying album artwork that itunes did not add. I am really hoping I don't have to do this again!
    Thanks for your help!

    If you follow the directions in this Link...
    Copy iTunes to an External Drive
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1751
    Everything should be carried across...

  • External hard drive for iPhotos and itunes

    I want to move my iPhotos and iTunes libraries to an external hard drive. What are the best external hard drives for a
    1. iMac running OSX Yosemite version 10.10.1
    2. MacBook Air (I actually want to store my iPhotos library stored currently on my old macbook pro to an external drive but access the library with my new MacBook Air.

    My personal preference for EHDs are these:  OWC Mercury Elite Pro. I have 6 of them and have no problems with any of them.  Be sure to format any drive you get to OS X Extended (journaled) with ownership set to be ignored.
    To copy the iPhoto library to the EHD just drag the iPhoto Library package from your Pictures folder to the EHD.  When the copying is completed launch iPhoto with the Option key held down and select the EHD library to open it.  Once you've confirmed that the EHD library is good and working as expected you can delete the library from your Pictures folder.
    Ask in the iTunes forum on how to move the iTunes library.

  • External hard drive for pc and mac

    How can I format my external hard drive to use it with both my pc and mac without deleting everything that's already on it?

    No. The process of reformatting the drive wipes out all data on the disk drive.
    Allan

  • My external hard drive for backup and Time Machine is full.  I bought a new HD.  Can I just begin using it, or must I transfer old BkUp and TM to the new HD?

    My external hard drive for Back Up and Time Machine is full.  I bought a new HD.  Can I just begin using it and rely on the old HD for past Time Machine versions, or must I transfer the old Back Up and Time Machine files to the new HD?

    It is your choice.
    If you don't want to be able to far back into the time slots covered by the old disk then just start using the new disk.
    If you want to retain the ability to go back into those time slots then copy it.
    Allan

  • External hard drive for PC and Mac, how to format?

    Hi
    I have 3 laptops at home which I use for different roles:
    1. A recent Macbook Pro with Leopard;
    2. PC with Windows XP SP2;
    3. PC with Windows Vista.
    I have just ordered a powerful external drive (actually four drives of 1TB each in one enclosure, configured into the fastest RAID 0 for my work and storage needs.
    I will need to edit High Definition movies directly from that hard drive, so I need to have very fast access to all files (up to 100MB/s - have eSATA connections sorted).
    Now my question is how should I format the hard drive so it is read and write accessible by all three computers?
    FAT32 is not an option because it has performance issues (and I need my HDD to be really fast) and wouldn't support files larger than 4GB (many of my videos are larger)...
    I probably also cannot create 2 separate partitions as I need to use the same files with both Mac and Windows systems (not at the same time but e.g. download a 10GB file with my Vista computer while I am away, later edit it with MBP, then maybe record it onto a blu-ray in my Windows XP machine.)
    I am sure there are many people out there with both Macs and PCs that need fast external hard drive where FAT32 is not good, so how do you format it?
    Many thanks!

    Hi,
    if what you are looking for is a 4-disk-raid NAS with e-sata connection, you are looking at US$1000 (without drives) for something like the Allnet ALL6700 or the QNAP TS509pro which can use a 5th disk for raid-5 redundancy. (With a 4-disk-raid-0, the chance of losing ALL data is 4 times higher than when storing on a single disk)
    With many NAS-devices, you don't have to worry about the format/file system - as capaho wrote, the box does it for You (don't take my word for it for a specific model). My DLink Nas ist Ext3-formatted and runs fine with OS X and/or XP - but can only be connected via LAN.
    If you have connected it to a switch/router and you are accessing it via LAN, don't expect a transfer rate of more than 20MByte/s (Gigabit-Lan) unless using professional equipment.

  • I want to format a Seagate Expansion External Hard Drive for Mac and PC

    I ordered a Seagate Expansion 2 TB USB 3.0 Desktop External Hard Drive to use with my new Mac and my old PC (or at least get my photos off of both and put them on the drive).  I thought all HDs could be formatted to use by both, I was able to get a Mac HD to work with my PC in 2008 (but it died). I am reading that this drive is PC only.  I have Parallels and Windows 8 on my Mac if worse comes to worse but I would like all of my computers, real, virtual old and new to be able to access the external drive.  Has anyone encountered this issue before?  What should I format it in? FAT32? If yes, how would I go about that on a Mac.  Or should I just return it? 
    I'm kind of Mac clueless.  I spent my childhood through college on a Mac but I graduated right when OSX came around and I don't know how to work with the Mac "under the hood" like I did with OS9 and with Windows.  So please talk to me like I am an an adult idiot.
    Thanks!!!! 

    The optimum choice is to format it ExFAT, but do so on the PC, not the Mac. Alternatively, you can make two partitions - one for the Mac; one for the PC. Partition the drive using GUID when you make the two partitions. Format one using Mac OS Extended, Journaled. Format the other on your PC using NTFS if you won't need to write to it from the OS X side or use ExFAT if you do.
    Drive Partition and Format
    1. Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to two. Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Apply button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) you will use for Windows from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    5. Set the format type to MSDOS.
    6. Click on the Erase button.
    When you connect the drive to your PC reformat the PC volume to either NTFS or ExFAT.

  • How to format an external hard drive previously run on win. xp

    I am trying to get into my external hard drive to edit or delete some old data that is no longer needed. I can get onto the hard drive but not remove any of the data, nor can I change the location of the files. Does anybody know how i can do this? I do have iWork'09. The store I bought the system from said that it would convert my files to be usable on my MAC.

    Windows has 2 HD formats, FAT32 and NTFS.
    The newer NTFS is not directly supported in OSX.
    Try:
    http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/24481/ntfs-3g
    or
    http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/30449/ntfs-for-mac
    to see if they can mount and read the drive for you.
    If you have a real problem, back-up your hard drive to a PC and reformat the drive to FAT32. Then return the files onto the HD and it should read OK on your Mac. Alternatively back the files up onto CD/DVDs these can be easily read on your Mac as well.
    Peter

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