External hd ntfs write from bootcamp windows

I have been using a PC and it recently died on me. I store many files on external drives. Now I am thinking of going to a Mac.
My question is if I use bootcamp and install Windows, can I read and (more importantly) write to my old NTFS external drives.
I understand that NTFS is read only on OSX but since bootcamp is formatting the Windows partition to NTFS, will I be able to read a write to those external drives if I am in Windows using bootcamp.
Thanks.

You want yes or no.
I am giving you that but also other things to consider.
For OS X you can always use them by buying Paragon Software NTFS for Mac OS X which I have used and use $19.
USB2 - never used it for disk drives, newest Macs have USB3 and Mac Pro most people use FireWire or eSATA or just pop a drive in one of the four drive bays to access and use it which will work fine.
For Windows you can migrate your Windows into Boot Camp by going through and buying WinClone.
Use WinClone for Windows
http://www.macwindows.com/Winclone-4_1-can-create-Boot-Camp-installer-package.ht ml
Yes you can use them as is. But why use USB2 when you are talking about a Mac that has drive bays for extra storage??
NTFS drives on USB, when accessed from within Mac OS are iffy and even read-only does not work well.
They should work. I just want to be sure:
You have a Mac Pro tower and not a notebook MacBook Pro (we get tons of such users posting here)
And if you want  to use an interface other than the very slow clumbersome USB2.

Similar Messages

  • How can i format an external drive so as to read and write from both windows and mac side

    i recently bought a macbook pro and used bootcamp so as to be able to run win7 and mac. I now wish to have an external drive so as to backup and tranfer files between the two os's. Specifically to read and write form either windows or mac. How can I do this?              

    Format it as FAT.

  • Disk utility resize mac partition resulted in 'no bootable disk' while starting from bootcamp windows partition

    my macbook air had two partitions for Mac OS and Windows XP. Because XP partition is too small, I used disk utitility in Mac OS to shrink the Mac partition, and make a new FAT32 partition, which I expected to use it in windows. Till now, I can find three partitions in disk utitily, MacOS/FAT32(which is totally free)/Bootcamp(windows). And in system preference->boot disk, I can see both Mac OS X and Bootcamp Windows.
    But when I reboot the computer and press "option" key while rebooting, I only see two boot device options, "mac os" and "recovery", no Bootcamp Windows.
    Anybody can give me a hand to recover my previous windows and use the freed partition in windows? Thanks.

    Hi Stefan!
    I have a rather similar problem having a BootCamp Windows 8 Partition. I actually have 2 NTFS partitions for windows and 1 for Mac OS. The situation is:
    0 - for Mac OS
    1 - BootCamp windows (NTFS - boot) - 60GB
    2 - Windows (NTFS) - 100GB
    After updating to Maverick I have no idea why, but now I have:
      in Mac OS:
    0 - Mac OS
    1 - BootCamp - 160G
      In Windows:
    0 - Mac OS
    1 - BootCamp - 60GB
    I have tried recovering the partition with a windows program, but all it could do is find it, but without any files on it.
    How can I restore my partition table to the way it was?!
    WHY did Mac OS mess up my windows partition table?
    WHY didn't I get a warning that the Boot Table will get altered?!
    Thank you for any help

  • Want to change from bootcamp windows 7 to parallels.

    I have recently bought a MBP and installed Windows 7 by using bootcamp. Could someone tell me how I can simply change this to i can use Parallels.Desktop v6? Please give me an indication of how complicated this is.

    Install Parallels. Start it up. Select your current Boot Camp installation of Windows as Parallels guest operating syste.
    You are then good to go using Windows in Parallels. Or, on the occsion you want to boot into Windows you can still do that.
    You don't need another Windows installation. Both Parallels and the Boot Camp installation are the same Windows. You will need to register Windows again. The Parallels help forums explain how to install Parallels.

  • MacBook Pro Hacked from bootcamp windows

    Hello All,
    I was on windows and downloading & installing 7zip.
    After installing I feel something wrong happen some strange popus some strange behaviour in browser. browser was closed and default serch engine was closed.
    It seams that I downloaded some enfected app I was even not able to trace what url I download as I was not careful before.
    After I leave windwos and back to Mountain Lion. I noticed that Launcher took more then usual time.
    And when I open my chrom browser it's default search engine was changed to Conduit Search "http://search.conduit.com/Results.aspx?ctid=CT3314958&octid=EB_ORIGINAL_CTID&Sea rchSource=58&CUI=&UM=2&UP=SP6C3AE6B3-DF32-4307-9FB5-8FA6CD32EDF8&q=%s"
    Same as windows.
    Also some other search engine added in list like
    "http://mixidj.delta-search.com/?q=%s&babsrc=SP_ss&mntrId=04A05C5948CD65F0&affID= 123187&tsp=5023"
    "http://search.qvo6.com/web/?utm_source=b&utm_medium=oneinstaller&utm_campaign=eX Q&utm_content=ds&from=oneinstaller&uid=HitachiXHTS727575A9E364_J3790084G673EGG67 3EGX&ts=1380682230&type=default&q=%s"
    So it looks my macbook is hacked. But not sure on which level. Is my keystroke is also being traped ?
    What action should I take next ?
    Should I reinstall all OS ?
    & What is safe way to avoid this situation in future ?
    Thanks & Regards
    Piyush Verma

    Please read this whole message before doing anything.
    I've tested these instructions only with the Safari web browser. If you use another browser, they may not work as described.
    This procedure is a diagnostic test. It won’t solve your problem. Don’t be disappointed when you find that nothing has changed after you complete it.
    Third-party system modifications are a common cause of usability problems. By a “system modification,” I mean software that affects the operation of other software — potentially for the worse. The following procedure will help identify which such modifications you've installed. Don’t be alarmed by the complexity of these instructions — they’re easy to carry out and won’t change anything on your Mac. 
    These steps are to be taken while booted in “normal” mode, not in safe mode. If you’re now running in safe mode, reboot as usual before continuing. 
    Below are instructions to enter some UNIX shell commands. The commands are harmless, but they must be entered exactly as given in order to work. If you have doubts about the safety of the procedure suggested here, search this site for other discussions in which it’s been followed without any report of ill effects. 
    Some of the commands will line-wrap or scroll in your browser, but each one is really just a single line, all of which must be selected. You can accomplish this easily by triple-clicking anywhere in the line. The whole line will highlight, and you can then copy it. The headings “Step 1” and so on are not part of the commands. 
    Note: If you have more than one user account, Step 2 must be taken as an administrator. Ordinarily that would be the user created automatically when you booted the system for the first time. The other steps should be taken as the user who has the problem, if different. Most personal Macs have only one user, and in that case this paragraph doesn’t apply. 
    Launch the Terminal application in any of the following ways: 
    ☞ Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.) 
    ☞ In the Finder, select Go ▹ Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens. 
    ☞ Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Terminal in the icon grid. 
    When you launch Terminal, a text window will open with a line already in it, ending either in a dollar sign (“$”) or a percent sign (“%”). If you get the percent sign, enter “sh” and press return. You should then get a new line ending in a dollar sign. 
    Step 1 
    Triple-click anywhere in the line of text below on this page to select it:
    kextstat -kl | awk '!/com\.apple/{printf "%s %s\n", $6, $7}' | open -ef 
    Copy the selected text to the Clipboard by pressing the key combination command-C. Then click anywhere in the Terminal window and paste (command-V). A TextEdit window will open with the output of the command. If the command produced no output, the window will be empty. Post the contents of the TextEdit window (not the Terminal window), if any — the text, please, not a screenshot. You can then close the TextEdit window. The title of the window doesn't matter, and you don't need to post that. No typing is involved in this step.
    Step 2 
    Repeat with this line:
    { sudo launchctl list | sed 1d | awk '!/0x|com\.(apple|openssh|vix\.cron)|org\.(amav|apac|cups|isc|ntp|postf|x)/{print $3}'; echo; sudo defaults read com.apple.loginwindow LoginHook; echo; sudo crontab -l; } 2> /dev/null | open -ef 
    This time you'll be prompted for your login password, which you do have to type. Nothing will be displayed when you type it. Type it carefully and then press return. You may get a one-time warning to be careful. Heed that warning, but don't post it. If you see a message that your username "is not in the sudoers file," then you're not logged in as an administrator. 
    Note: If you don’t have a login password, you’ll need to set one before taking this step. If that’s not possible, skip to the next step. 
    Step 3
    { launchctl list | sed 1d | awk '!/0x|com\.apple|org\.(x|openbsd)/{print $3}'; echo; crontab -l 2> /dev/null; } | open -ef 
    Step 4
    ls -A /e*/{cr,la,mach}* {,/}Lib*/{Ad,Compon,Ex,Fram,In,Keyb,La,Mail/Bu,P*P,Priv,Qu,Scripti,Servi,Spo,Sta}* L*/Fonts .la* 2> /dev/null | open -ef  
    Important: If you formerly synchronized with a MobileMe account, your me.com email address may appear in the output of the above command. If so, anonymize it before posting. 
    Step 5
    osascript -e 'tell application "System Events" to get name of login items' | open -ef 
    Remember, steps 1-5 are all copy-and-paste — no typing, except your password. Also remember to post the output. 
    You can then quit Terminal.

  • Write from one window to another?

    any suggestions? or methods that I would need to use?

    I am using this code just to write into a textboxWhat textbox? All I see is a MessageDialog.
    Anyway, Assuming you're using a JTextField, add a reference to the text field(s) you want to update:
    private class TextFieldHandler implements ActionListener //line85
      private List fields = new ArrayList();
      public void addField(JTextField f) {
        fields.add(f);
      public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent e)
        if(e.getSource()==txt1)
          Iterator it = fields.iterator();
          while (it.hasNext()) {
            JTextField f = (JTextField)it.next();
            f.setText(txt1.getText());
    }

  • Ntpdate and ntpd not setting time when rebooting from BootCamp/Windows

    I've got a farily consistent repro here, where my kids will reboot using BootCamp to play a game in Vista, and when they reboot back to Mac OS X, the time is set to UTC instead of adjusted for PDT.
    I noticed in the system.log:
    Oct 17 15:37:46 iMac ntpdate[114]: can't find host time.apple.com\n
    Oct 17 15:37:46 iMac ntpdate[114]: no servers can be used, exiting
    Oct 17 15:37:46 iMac ntpd[140]: bind() fd 10, family 30, port 123, addr fe80:4::21b:63ff:fe97:514e, in6is_addrmulticast=0 flags=0 fails: Can't assign requested address
    I've already tried the fix at http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=303731 but it didn't seem to help;
    I'm wondering if the network isn't fully operational yet (I'm connected 100BaseT to an always on cable modem, but hey, even that can take a couple of seconds) and that may be causing the issue...
    Help is appreciated. Of course, I'm planning on switching to Leopard when I can, but for now this is just plain annoying.

    That sort of showed me that the problem is that ntpd is running but it isn't connecting:
    xxx $ /usr/bin/ntpq -c peers
    No association ID's returned
    xxx $
    If I kill the ntpd's that are running and start them manually, I get:
    ntpq> peers
    remote refid st t when poll reach delay offset jitter
    ==============================================================================
    time0.apple.com 17.72.133.55 2 u 10 68m 1 32.977 3.652 0.001
    ntpq> q
    Clearly I'm successful in connecting at least once, so how is this not working right after a boot when I've used BootCamp? If I just reboot the mac without having switched to BootCamp, I don't recall seeing this issue...

  • What is the best software programs that I can use to read, write and modify data / files on external HD (NTFS format i.e.  Windows) ?

    Hi guys,
    I’m new to Mac and have a MacBook Pro Lion OS (10.6.8 I think !!!) with Parallels 7 (Windows 7) installed. Can someone please tell me what is the best software program that I can use to read, write and modify data / files on external HD (NTFS format) from the Mac OS ? I heard of Paragon and Tuxera NTFS. Are they free ? Are they good ? Are there any other software programs out there ? I heard that some people have issues with Paragon.
    Thanks.

    Your best bet would be to take the drive to the oldest/compatible with that drive Windows PC and grab the files off, right click and format it exFAT (XP users can download exFAT from Microsoft) and then put the files back on.
    Mac's can read and write all Windows files formats except write to NTFS (and in some cases not read) so if you can change the format of the drive to exFAT (all data has to be remove first) then you will have a drive that doesn't require paid third party NTFS software (a license fee goes to Microsoft) for updates.
    Also it's one less hassle to deal with too.
    .Drives, partitions, formatting w/Mac's + PC's

  • Clone a Mac Partition to an External Drive from within Windows 7 Bootcamp?

    Anyone know if it is possible to clone the mac os x partition to an external drive from within Windows 7 bootcamp? I (like a few others) had a problem with the latest 10.6.3 update and I cannot boot into the mac partition but I can access it via bootcamp so I was thinking about trying to clone it to an external drive and then boot from the new clone and see if that works.
    Appreciate your comments.

    setup a 30GB partition on an external drive, along with a partition of 150% the size of your Mac OS X volume -- or larger.
    Install OS X to 30GB.
    While booted from DVD, before you install, you'll need to go to Utility Menu => Disk Utility to do the partitoning. While there, in DU see if you can repair your system.
    And where is your TimeMachine or clone backup? The "Step #1: Backup before beginning your Boot Camp project."?
    No way to backup or clone from within Windows, though you may be able to write to NTFS backup volume, UNLESS you bought MacDrive8 which allows read AND write to HFS+ from within Windows.

  • I have a seagate external hard drive with files copied from windows pc. If I will download NTFS driver from seagate to my mac, could I install it safely without harming my files in the external hard drive? I am afraid I may erase all files in there.

    I have a seagate external hard drive with files transferred from my windows pc. If I will download NTFS Driver from seagate to my mac, could I install it safely without harming my files? I am afraid.. I might erase all my important files during the installation..

    Thanks a lot! I have already downloaded Paragon Driver and it works well with seagate external hard drive. I am copying as of now my important files from my mac to it. However, I have only the trial version which will expire in 10 days. I don't have credit card to buy for it.

  • HT2963 I have a 1 TG external drive that is formatted to Windows NTFS and is read only, how do i get it to read and write on my Mac OS X 10.6.3?

    I I have a 1 TG external drive that is formatted to Windows NTFS and is read only, how do i get it to read and write on my Mac OS X 10.6.3?

    Install software such as Paragon NTFS, or reformat it as Mac OS Extended (Journaled) or FAT32. Mac OS X 10.6.5 and newer can also read and write exFAT partitions.
    (97498)

  • Created second partition in bootcamp Windows and converted whole disk from basic to dynamic

    Hi everyone. I don't post here often however I hope the following helps someone else down the road.
    I currently user ML and have bootcamp installed. I needed more space on my ML partition so decided to free up space from bootcamp. Going about this completely the wrong way I booted into my bootcamp partition, ran the computer management app and shrank my boot camp partition by 8 GB. This created free unused space which I decided to format over to NTFS with a view to booting back into ML, deleting and adding to my ML partition (how wrong was I).
    Prior to completing the format of the newly created free space in bootcamp I was presented with the usual 'yes' / 'no' warning dialogue saying something along the lines of 'formatting this disk from basic to dynamic will prevent any installed operating systems from booting'. I made three monumental blunders at this stage: a) not reading the dialoge box b) completely disregarding the severity of the warning in the diaglogue box c) (you guessed it) pressing 'yes'.
    The moment I pressed yes it was the start of a four hour feeling of grief as I thought of the last 6 years of my life wiped from below my nose with no time machine backup.
    Upon rebooting bootcamp to get into ML the reality of the situation hit home as no OSX boot, no apple logo, no boot sound, my mac is trying to boot into windows without the option key being held in or warning to present me with a BSOD.
    One thought in my mind: "oh Sh*t!!!"
    3.5 hours passes and much reading online, learning of linux commands, downloading of linux distros, finding out how to install software and successfully setup a bootable linux usb and I'm typing this up on my mac while I time machine my data away to a freshly formatted external drive. Many lessons learned.
    This is what I did amongst the vacating of my bowels and absorption of much nicotine.
    There are two pointers to this guide. I was lucky enough to have another computer at hand to conduct the research and create a bootable usb. It a windows 7 toshiba z930. So you're going to need at a minimum: another computer (windows for the guide), a usb stick 2~4GB should be ok.
    1) download a linux iso, I downloaded ubuntu, you can download what ever you like, but you're going to need linux (the rest of my mini guide will use ubuntu 13.10 during examples) http://www.ubuntu.com/start-download?distro=desktop&bits=64&release=latest
    2) download Universal USB Stick Installer 1.9.5.1 (from now on as UUSI) http://www.pendrivelinux.com/downloads/Universal-USB-Installer/Universal-USB-Ins taller-1.9.5.1.exe
    3) plug in your usb drive. make sure there is nothing on it that you need to keep as it will be formatted and lost. also plug your mac into a router connected to the internet. this will help prevent any issues with wireless drivers when booting into ubuntu later on.
    4) once the downloads are complete, run UUSI, get past the prompts until you get to the 'setup your selections page'
    5) (A) select 'ubuntu' from step 1. (B) browse to your freshly downloaded ubuntu iso in step 2. (C) tick show all drives. (D) select the drive letter of your usb in step 3. tick we will format *drive letter here*. (E) depending on the size of your usb set some persistent storage - I had an 8gb usb to hand so I set 1GB, less will probably do. (F) double check your settings and click create then let the program do it's thing, it can take some time depending on the speed of your usb drive, mine took 10 mins.
    6) safely remove the usb and plug it into your mac, turn the mac on and hold the option key, once the usb drive is found hit enter and select ‘try ubuntu without installing’
    7) wait for the ubuntu os to load and click the settings icon from the left tool bar
    8) under settings click user accounts
    9) click the + symbol in the bottom left hand corner
    10) select administrator from the account type box and type a name for your account then click add
    11) select the account and change the password, then confirm it and click change
    12) go back to the desktop and select the power off symbol in the top right hand corner and select your name from the list, this will log you out of your current session and ask you to log in under your newly created login
    13) once logged in click the settings icon again from the left hand menu and under settings go to software and updates
    14) in software & updates under the ubuntu software tab tick ‘community maintained free and open source software (universe)’ and ‘software restricted by copyright or legal issues (maintained)’ then click close and close the settings window. Also check at the bottom of this window under ‘installable from cd-rom/dvd’ for two entries ‘cdrom with ubuntu 13.10 ‘saucy salamander’ - uncheck on of these entries if both are the same. Not sure if this was just me or a common problem. I found that trying to do the apt-get update would run into errors at the end if one of the entries wasn't deselected.
    15) hold ctrl + alt + T to bring up the terminal
    16) in the terminal window type sudo passwd root then enter a password for the account
    17) in the same terminal window type sudo -i and enter the password given from step 16 if requested
    18) in the same terminal window type apt-get update and wait for the update to finish without errors
    19) in the same terminal windows type apt-get install testdisk and wait for the installation to finish without errors
    20) in the same terminal window type testdisk
    21) select create log and then the drive you want to work on e.g. your main apple OS hard disk then select proceed
    22) select your file system type - for my ML installation I had to select ‘EFI GPT’ I don’t know if this will be the same throughout all macs / macbooks
    23) select analyse, the step should take less than a few seconds and testdisk may report back errors with the partitions or it may proceed to the ‘current partition structure’ screen. If errors are displayed proceed past them until the next screen.
    24) at the ‘current partition screen’ select quick search, you will have an opportunity to backup your drive here. I won’t go through this step (never learn) as I did not complete it myself
    25) after the searching has completed all the partitions on the disk should be shown. Find your OSX partition using the size reference at the bottom by pressing the up and down keys. Once you have found the partition that relates to the OSX partition that is failing to start hit the right key to make it a primary partition a ‘P’ should show to the left of the partition data. I had to make sure my EFI System and Mac HFS (155GB) partitions were marked as primary.
    26) hit the enter key to continue to the next screen and use the right arrow key to select ‘write’
    27) the program will warn you it will write the partition table so hit ‘Y’ and a confirmation should be displayed that this has been successful.
    28) reboot the computer and remove the USB stick (i removed it at the white loading screen after the reboot, not sure if it makes any difference)
    29) allow the computer longer to boot, mine took about 35 seconds to show the apple symbol whereas it normally took between 3~7 seconds before I destroyed it.
    30) get into OSX and backup everything to time machine or whatever you use then it probably a good idea to kill off your bootcamp install and refresh your mac from the fresh backup.
    Hope this helps someone. I couldn’t find anything conclusive on the net when I ran into problems (all my own fault really for not reading the dialogues correctly) however I used bits from multiple forums and found out parts myself especially the linux parts as I don't know the os at all . Certainly won’t be making this mistake again anytime soon.
    Well I’ve had an awful night and have work in two hours but at least the last 6 years of my (now backed up) life is intact and in my hands. I’d rather lose a night of sleep than lose all my data.
    Sorry if some of the stuff above is wrong as I don't do this thing on osx / linux at all really. At least it might point you in the right direction.

    Hi everyone. I don't post here often however I hope the following helps someone else down the road.
    I currently user ML and have bootcamp installed. I needed more space on my ML partition so decided to free up space from bootcamp. Going about this completely the wrong way I booted into my bootcamp partition, ran the computer management app and shrank my boot camp partition by 8 GB. This created free unused space which I decided to format over to NTFS with a view to booting back into ML, deleting and adding to my ML partition (how wrong was I).
    Prior to completing the format of the newly created free space in bootcamp I was presented with the usual 'yes' / 'no' warning dialogue saying something along the lines of 'formatting this disk from basic to dynamic will prevent any installed operating systems from booting'. I made three monumental blunders at this stage: a) not reading the dialoge box b) completely disregarding the severity of the warning in the diaglogue box c) (you guessed it) pressing 'yes'.
    The moment I pressed yes it was the start of a four hour feeling of grief as I thought of the last 6 years of my life wiped from below my nose with no time machine backup.
    Upon rebooting bootcamp to get into ML the reality of the situation hit home as no OSX boot, no apple logo, no boot sound, my mac is trying to boot into windows without the option key being held in or warning to present me with a BSOD.
    One thought in my mind: "oh Sh*t!!!"
    3.5 hours passes and much reading online, learning of linux commands, downloading of linux distros, finding out how to install software and successfully setup a bootable linux usb and I'm typing this up on my mac while I time machine my data away to a freshly formatted external drive. Many lessons learned.
    This is what I did amongst the vacating of my bowels and absorption of much nicotine.
    There are two pointers to this guide. I was lucky enough to have another computer at hand to conduct the research and create a bootable usb. It a windows 7 toshiba z930. So you're going to need at a minimum: another computer (windows for the guide), a usb stick 2~4GB should be ok.
    1) download a linux iso, I downloaded ubuntu, you can download what ever you like, but you're going to need linux (the rest of my mini guide will use ubuntu 13.10 during examples) http://www.ubuntu.com/start-download?distro=desktop&bits=64&release=latest
    2) download Universal USB Stick Installer 1.9.5.1 (from now on as UUSI) http://www.pendrivelinux.com/downloads/Universal-USB-Installer/Universal-USB-Ins taller-1.9.5.1.exe
    3) plug in your usb drive. make sure there is nothing on it that you need to keep as it will be formatted and lost. also plug your mac into a router connected to the internet. this will help prevent any issues with wireless drivers when booting into ubuntu later on.
    4) once the downloads are complete, run UUSI, get past the prompts until you get to the 'setup your selections page'
    5) (A) select 'ubuntu' from step 1. (B) browse to your freshly downloaded ubuntu iso in step 2. (C) tick show all drives. (D) select the drive letter of your usb in step 3. tick we will format *drive letter here*. (E) depending on the size of your usb set some persistent storage - I had an 8gb usb to hand so I set 1GB, less will probably do. (F) double check your settings and click create then let the program do it's thing, it can take some time depending on the speed of your usb drive, mine took 10 mins.
    6) safely remove the usb and plug it into your mac, turn the mac on and hold the option key, once the usb drive is found hit enter and select ‘try ubuntu without installing’
    7) wait for the ubuntu os to load and click the settings icon from the left tool bar
    8) under settings click user accounts
    9) click the + symbol in the bottom left hand corner
    10) select administrator from the account type box and type a name for your account then click add
    11) select the account and change the password, then confirm it and click change
    12) go back to the desktop and select the power off symbol in the top right hand corner and select your name from the list, this will log you out of your current session and ask you to log in under your newly created login
    13) once logged in click the settings icon again from the left hand menu and under settings go to software and updates
    14) in software & updates under the ubuntu software tab tick ‘community maintained free and open source software (universe)’ and ‘software restricted by copyright or legal issues (maintained)’ then click close and close the settings window. Also check at the bottom of this window under ‘installable from cd-rom/dvd’ for two entries ‘cdrom with ubuntu 13.10 ‘saucy salamander’ - uncheck on of these entries if both are the same. Not sure if this was just me or a common problem. I found that trying to do the apt-get update would run into errors at the end if one of the entries wasn't deselected.
    15) hold ctrl + alt + T to bring up the terminal
    16) in the terminal window type sudo passwd root then enter a password for the account
    17) in the same terminal window type sudo -i and enter the password given from step 16 if requested
    18) in the same terminal window type apt-get update and wait for the update to finish without errors
    19) in the same terminal windows type apt-get install testdisk and wait for the installation to finish without errors
    20) in the same terminal window type testdisk
    21) select create log and then the drive you want to work on e.g. your main apple OS hard disk then select proceed
    22) select your file system type - for my ML installation I had to select ‘EFI GPT’ I don’t know if this will be the same throughout all macs / macbooks
    23) select analyse, the step should take less than a few seconds and testdisk may report back errors with the partitions or it may proceed to the ‘current partition structure’ screen. If errors are displayed proceed past them until the next screen.
    24) at the ‘current partition screen’ select quick search, you will have an opportunity to backup your drive here. I won’t go through this step (never learn) as I did not complete it myself
    25) after the searching has completed all the partitions on the disk should be shown. Find your OSX partition using the size reference at the bottom by pressing the up and down keys. Once you have found the partition that relates to the OSX partition that is failing to start hit the right key to make it a primary partition a ‘P’ should show to the left of the partition data. I had to make sure my EFI System and Mac HFS (155GB) partitions were marked as primary.
    26) hit the enter key to continue to the next screen and use the right arrow key to select ‘write’
    27) the program will warn you it will write the partition table so hit ‘Y’ and a confirmation should be displayed that this has been successful.
    28) reboot the computer and remove the USB stick (i removed it at the white loading screen after the reboot, not sure if it makes any difference)
    29) allow the computer longer to boot, mine took about 35 seconds to show the apple symbol whereas it normally took between 3~7 seconds before I destroyed it.
    30) get into OSX and backup everything to time machine or whatever you use then it probably a good idea to kill off your bootcamp install and refresh your mac from the fresh backup.
    Hope this helps someone. I couldn’t find anything conclusive on the net when I ran into problems (all my own fault really for not reading the dialogues correctly) however I used bits from multiple forums and found out parts myself especially the linux parts as I don't know the os at all . Certainly won’t be making this mistake again anytime soon.
    Well I’ve had an awful night and have work in two hours but at least the last 6 years of my (now backed up) life is intact and in my hands. I’d rather lose a night of sleep than lose all my data.
    Sorry if some of the stuff above is wrong as I don't do this thing on osx / linux at all really. At least it might point you in the right direction.

  • [Help Accessing External usb 1TB HD from windows 7 on Imac with Lion]

    Hello to everyone, i would like some help and im not finding any solution on how to solve the problem. I upgraded from snow leopard to Lion, where i could share without any problem every file on mac hd or the external hd, no problems at all. Now using osx lion and its such a headache to share anything, i created a "sharing only" account and added it on the "file sharing" after enable "Share files and folders using SMB".
    Now the problem is, i went to the "+" add button on the "Shared Folders" and added all folders there that i would like to use from my windows 7 PC, i can access everything that is on the macintosh HD, but i cant access anything that is on my external HD. I dont know if this information is relevant but im using paragon ntfs 9.0.5 to manage the use of the external ntfs HD. I tried "Apply permissions to enclosed items" on every user listed for the folders i want to access, but it didnt help either.
    Thanks in advance.

    Holding alt key does bring up the choices, but I never see the bootable USB or external DVD drive as options... I only see the 2 partitions - the main iMac and the partition created by Bootcamp to install windows.

  • CD Boot: memory overflow error! Trying to install Bootcamp / Windows 7 on MacBook Pro 2009 with external superdrive

    Hi all,
    I'm trying to install Bootcamp on my machine.
    I was running Parallels before but need Bootcamp in order to run heavy software on the PC side (e.g. Rhino/Maxwell/etc).
    I have a Macbook Pro 17" from around 2009, running Mountain Lion 10.7.3. 
    Problem is, my internal CD Drive is broken and doesn't read discs, so it couldn't read the Windows installation disc (Windows Home Premium 7 64 bit - OEM System Builder Pack).
    So, I rang Apple to try to fix it and they said it would be cheaper and faster to buy an external SuperDrive.
    I explained that I wanted it to install bootcamp and they said, fine.
    However when I bought the SuperDrive, it turns out its only supposed to be working with new Macbook Pro with Retina display, and other machines that don't have internal cd drives.
    At first it didnt work, but then I found a helpful website which enabled it to work on my machine.
    So I went ahead and started installing Windows through the BootCamp Assistant.
    It partitioned my hard drive - success!
    But then it turned into black screen, with message saying "CDBOOT: Memory overfloor error"
    Help please!!!
    I suspect the problem is either:
    a) Old Macbook Pro can't boot from the Windows disk
    or
    b) The Windows OEM version is somehow not designed to work with Mac. I bought it secondhand off a guy, thinking it was the full version, silly thing to do!
    Your thoughts and help is seriously appreciated!
    Tomorrow I'm going to the Apple Store and also to buy a brand new copy of Windows, I guess.

    This has been resolved. It turned out that in spite of the message at the end of installation - "Windows could not complete the installation. To install Windows on this computer restart the installation" Windows was installed successfully but the problem was the Bootcamp drivers, it could not read them(install them) from my original OSX Istall DVD and I thought that that the whole package was not installed successfully. I will copy the intructions here as well since this thread may attract lots of other people with similar problem who may think it was not a good installation. Here you go:
    Ok, after 3 sleepness nights I have found a solution and finally have a working Windows 7 Ultimate. I hope this will be helpful for everyone having similar issues and not have to go through the same nightmare.
    Right away after logging in Windows for the first time insert the original Snow Leopard Install DVD and if Windows does not read it or install any drivers after clicking on setup.exe do the following:
    Right-click on Start » Programs » Accessories » Command Prompt
    Select Run as Administrator
    Type cd /d D:, then press Enter
    Type cd Boot Camp\Drivers\Apple, then press Enter
    Type BootCamp64.msi, then press Enter
    If you do not how to right click before installing the drivers the following:
    Click on Start
    Enter cmd in the search box
    Instead of hitting the Enter key use Ctrl + Shift + Enter and will open a dialog box
    Click Yes at the prompt and you will be running as an administrator.
    If you do not have the original install DVD go the this link and follow the instructions(including the ones from the last comment):
    <Edited by Host>

  • I am moving from PC to Mac.  My PC has two internal drives and I have a 3Tb external.  What is best way to move the data from the internal drives to Mac and the best way to make the external drive read write without losing data

    I am moving from PC to Mac.  My PC has two internal drives and I have a 3Tb external.  What is best way to move the data from the internal drives to Mac and the best way to make the external drive read write without losing data

    Paragon even has non-destriuctive conversion utility if you do want to change drive.
    Hard to imagine using 3TB that isn't NTFS. Mac uses GPT for default partition type as well as HFS+
    www.paragon-software.com
    Some general Apple Help www.apple.com/support/
    Also,
    Mac OS X Help
    http://www.apple.com/support/macbasics/
    Isolating Issues in Mac OS
    http://support.apple.com/kb/TS1388
    https://www.apple.com/support/osx/
    https://www.apple.com/support/quickassist/
    http://www.apple.com/support/mac101/help/
    http://www.apple.com/support/mac101/tour/
    Get Help with your Product
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=304725
    Apple Mac App Store
    https://discussions.apple.com/community/mac_app_store/using_mac_apple_store
    How to Buy Mac OS X Mountain Lion/Lion
    http://www.apple.com/osx/how-to-upgrade/
    TimeMachine 101
    https://support.apple.com/kb/HT1427
    http://www.apple.com/support/timemachine
    Mac OS X Community
    https://discussions.apple.com/community/mac_os

Maybe you are looking for