Partition my external hd for win games?

What is the best way to partition my external "wd my passport for mac" 1tb Hard disk, or do I even need to? I want to use it for storing windows games to use in boot camp and time machine for os x 10.8, itunes, iphoto etc... .

Buy Paragon NTFS
Format what you need.
Custom install apps.
I would not put "all my eggs in one basket"
Keep one drive for Windows games and backup.
And I even go so far as to never rely on just one backup using TimeMachine. I would if you have the room put a system image clone on 2nd partition of your WD Passport.
However you would want USB3 or FW800 or eSATA, not USB2.

Similar Messages

  • Partitioning my hard Drive for PC Games

    This would be my first time asking a question to Apple Support Communities. I have a question regarding partitioning my hard drive for PC Games. I would have to use boot camp to install windows to be able to play those pc games... but before i buy windows 7 OS i want to know if this is going to work to play the games that i want. what to look for about system requirements ext.. so that i dont waste money. I have a macbook pro. OS X 10.8.5 Intel HD 4000 , Nividia Geforce 650 m. 2.7 processor intel core i7 , 16 GB of memory DDR3  when i look at system requirements with the games what am i looking for so that i dont waste my money i am knew to the mac os so any advice i can get. should i go this route of partitioning my hard drive?

    Kingstonpro wrote:
     ...before i buy windows 7 OS i want to know if this is going to work to play the games that i want. what to look for about system requirements ext.. so that i dont waste money
    when i look at system requirements with the games what am i looking for so that i dont waste my money
    Determine your Mac's ability for 3D games
    What my user tip will allow you to do is get the performance rating of your video graphics and then you can compare that rating with the one the developer provides as the minimal amount you need to run the game you want.
    Some developers do not easily list the performance requirements because they sell so many titles to people who don't know any better. Your obviously not that type of person.
    should i go this route of partitioning my hard drive?
    To get the full hardware performance of the hardware to run Windows 3D games, you need to install Windows into Apple provided BootCamp. and boot up the computer directly into Windows.
    However it's also possible to run some Windows games (2D and simple ones) in a virtual machine program in OS X, provide they use OpenGL drivers (not only DirectX)
    You install BootCamp first, then use a commecial virtual machine software like VMFusion or Parallels Desktop to copy the BootCamped Windows to use it as a virtual machine in OS X.
    You will then have two Windows on your Mac, one in BootCamp and the other in a file on OS X to run at the same time as your using OS X.
    There is the free VirtualBox too, but it doesn't have the ability to copy the BootCamp partition, but it's free and updated longer without begging for more money all the time like the commercial versions do.
    Windows in BootCamp or Virtual Machine?
    I would Like to get more information about the question should i partition my hard drive to be able to play pc games does this really work to be able to play those games
    Yes, you will get better performance direct booting the Mac into Windows to play most 3D games.
    This means you will have to find a copy of Windows 7 to purchase online, the 64bit retail disk of Win 7 Pro or better.
    is their any thing i need to know about the techinal aspects of installing windows on my mac computer... is there anything that i need to watch out for so that this would work. I just want to make sure that it will work.
    Basically BootCamp does all the work setting up the partition for Windows install, then it hands you off with a list of printed instructions to install Windows.
    Mac's cannot format NTFS drives, so when you boot off the Windows disk, you first have to change the format of the Bootcamp parittion to NTFS (from FAT32/MSDOS that Apple formats it as)
    When you finish with BootCamp, the machine reboots and your looking at a blining line on a black screen, reboot the computer holding the option key down, this enters Startup Manager and you can select OSX to  boot and get online for assistance.
    However if you read the BootCamp material, it should explain everything, also there are video's on YouTube as well how to go about things.
    There is Mac drivers that need to be installed into Windows, so that you can get online and other things in Windows.
    I advise having another computer or Internet device so you can come here to ask in the BootCamp forum for assistance with your install as your computer will be out of operation while installing Windows.
    If you don't think you can handle it, a local PC/Mac tech can do it for you.
    you know on games that you buy they have system requirements what if it ask for a diffrent kind of Graphics gard, like radon or another Geforce type. should i pay attention to those diffrences. What is the rule of thumb on the details techinaly...
    Determine your Mac's ability for 3D games

  • I want to partition an external device for OSX and Windows.  Opened Disk utility but Partition is not an option

    I want to partition an external drive for OSX and PC.  Went to Disk Utility but Partition is not an available option.

    Why not? does the partition tab not exist?

  • Should I create a partition on external drive for iTunes music?

    ...or will it create it's own space outwith my backup stuff?
    (Secondary question: would moving my iTunes music from internal to external drive noticably improve performance of my Mac? I'm using about 135GB of a 250GB drive, 60GB of which is in iTunes Music folder)

    Should I create a partition on external drive for iTunes music? or will it create it's own space outwith my backup stuff?
    I see no good reason to create a separate partition unless you're backing up with Time Machine. TM prefers to have it's own volume, so in that case partitioning would probably be a good idea.
    would moving my iTunes music from internal to external drive noticably improve performance of my Mac? I'm using about 135GB of a 250GB drive, 60GB of which is in iTunes Music folder.
    No, probably not. As long as you're not getting the drive too full - opinions vary but about 20GB remaining should be plenty for most uses - you probably won't see any overall change in performance just from moving the iTunes content.
    Message was edited by: Dave Sawyer

  • Full HD LCD TV as external monitor for Win XP games?

    Hello everyone,
    I have a current MacBook Pro with Mac OS X 10.5.2 (Great machine.
    I am also running Windows XP via BootCamp for some business applications and games.
    I would now like to buy a "Full HD" LCD TV (probably the Samsung LE 40 M 86 BD) and use it as an external monitor for gaming, using a DVI > HDMI cable.
    Will this work? I.e.:
    + MacBook Pro (2 GB / 2.2 GHz / GeForce 8600M GT)
    + BootCamp & Windows XP SP2
    + DVI > HDMI Cable
    + Samsung Full HD TV (1920x1080)
    + DirectX 8/9 games (Half-Life 2, Portal, Far Cry etc.)
    = Big Screen Gaming?
    Or are there pitfalls I am currently not thinking of?
    (This is one of those questions where the typical TV dealer / Windows gamer will shrug and say "Yeah. Whatever. Should work. Maybe. Buy everything and try it.")
    I'd be glad if people who have tried this could share their experiences.
    Thanks.

    Thing is, I am trying this too. However, the only option I get is to clone the display. This is not what I want, I want to use the TV as the primary display. This way games will startup on the big TV and not on my Macbook Pro. Now I don't get the option to use that TV as a primary display.
    So leaves me with the option to clone the display and have same image rendered on both screens... This is NOT what i want. In Leopard everything works great... obviously...
    PLease let me know if you got any solutions for this

  • Can I partition my external HD for both Time Machine and for basic disk use

    I wanted to know if through Disk Utility I can partition my external HD so that I have about 400 gigs for TM and 100 gigs just for storage? Thank You in advance

    Yes, you can. I did the same thing.
    Also, by default Time Machine will not back up what you have on that extra partition. You can make it so that it does if needed (Would be a bit overkill if you did).
    I actually have 3 partitions.
    1 is for Superduper (when it's Leopard compatible).
    2 is for Time Machine.
    3 is for other storage.

  • How to best partition an external drive for my purposes?

    Hello, please help,
    I've just bought a Western Digital 'My Passport' 320Gb USB (no firewire) portable external harddrive for backing up my data prior to iMac repair.
    I also plan to totally wipe my PPC iMac and reinstall it with Leopard.
    I erased the external HD, zeroing out the data from it's previous owner, and reformatted it as Mac OS Extended (not journaled).
    Now I realise that it might be even more useful than I'd imagined.
    I'd now like to partition it so I can use Carbon Copy Cloner to create a bootable copy of my entire iMac while using the rest of the drive as a separate partition for just backing up data.
    Ideally I want to be able to use the drive on both Intel and PPC Macs and even PCs, is this possible? How should I format the drive to achieve this?
    I've heard I should format it as Mac OS Extended (Journaled) HFS+, what ever that is
    I'm currently running OS 10.4.11 but plan to buy Leopard and install that after the wipe.

    17" 1.9Ghz iMac G5 (iSight)
    I've just bought a Western Digital 'My Passport' 320Gb USB (no firewire)
    I'd now like to partition it so I can use Carbon Copy Cloner to create a bootable copy of my entire iMac while using the rest of the drive as a separate partition for just backing up data.
    Ideally I want to be able to use the drive on both Intel and PPC Macs and even PCs, is this possible? How should I format the drive to achieve this?
    For what you want to do, there is a mismatch between your PPC computer and the external drive that you bought.
    With a few exceptions, a PPC Mac requires a firewire external drive for booting and will not boot from a USB drive, regardless of which OS is installed and regardless of the partition scheme and volume format on the drive. I also have an iMac G5, and mine will not boot from USB.
    If you do exchange your drive for a firewire drive, do not get another Western Digital model to use with your G5 - many external WD firewire drives will not boot a PPC mac. See [this page|http://wdc.custhelp.com/cgi-bin/wdc.cfg/php/enduser/stdadp.php?pfaqid=1787]
    If you want to keep your present USB drive, you can still partition it with one partition for a backup clone and another for "other stuff". With respect to immediate use for recovering your stuff after a clean Leopard install on the HD, I think that Migration Assistant will still work, though I haven't tried this. As for the future, the problems with a clone not being bootable are 1) You can't test it to see if it works OK, and 2) If you do need to restore from it you'd need to boot from "somewhere else" - I think you could boot from an install disk and use Disk Utility's Restore feature to clone it back.
    With regard to PC access, a PPC mac normally requires an Apple Partition Map partition scheme on the drive for booting, and such a scheme does not allow for the FAT32 volume format that is readable by PCs. However in this case since your PPC mac can't boot from it anyway, you could partition the drive as GUID. This would allow the main volume to be formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled) for the nonbootable clone, and would allow the extra volume to be formatted as FAT32. If you eventually got an Intel Mac, a clone from it to the main volume would also then be bootable.
    But what I would do, if feasible, is exchange the USB drive and get a non-WD firewire drive instead.
    Message was edited by: jsd2

  • Partition an External Drive for Time Machine?

    I am new to the Mac world. I have a new iMac with a 1TB hard drive. I have a 2TB external USB hard drive I've plugged in and started using with Time Machine to backup up my Mac. But I'm thinking I'm wasting a lot of hard drive space which I could use for something else. Can I partition the external hard drive say into two 1TB partitions and use one for Time Machine and one for something else? If so, can I do it now that Time Machine thinks it has all 2TB? Or do I have to start from scratch? Thanks!

    +Can I partition the external hard drive say into two 1TB partitions and use one for Time Machine and one for something else?+
    You can, but it's not advisable. How are you going to back up the data on the other partition? If your internal drive is 1 TB, then 2 TB is about the right size for a TM backup volume.
    If you place any value on your data, hard drives are cheap. Just get another one.

  • Use a partition on external drive for windows support software

    Hello
    I am trying to install Windows 7 on my MacBook AIR  13" 8GB.  I have an external drive that i created a partition for the Windows Support software but when I choose to proceed in Boot Camp Assistant to download the windows support software it says the entire drive has to be one partition formatted to MS DOS.
    Any way around this..I have the Windows disc and would like to avoid having to buy another 8 GB or greater size external disc drive
    Thanks

    I do not want to install Windows on the external drive.
    An external drive is needed to download the windows support software as stated in Boot Camp.  It seems I cannot use a partition on the external drive to download the support software.. Wondering if there is a work around this..

  • Partitioning an External Drive for a Mac

    Hi there, I have a 300GB external Seagate hard drive. I'm connecting it through FireWire. I want to partition my drive in 2 partitions. Each 1/2 (150GB). 1 for Windows (Fat 32) and one for Mac (?)
    I already have the Windows Partition finished, and put some files on it which I don't wish to have to copy over again. (It took a long time.)
    In Disk Utility on my Macbook Pro, how can I take the empty space (150GB) on the drive, and partition it so my Mac can use it? I do not know which disk format to use. Journaled, or Extended? I just set it to Extended as a guess, and when I click partition, it says it will wipe the entire volume. What do I do?

    Well, there's definitely a communications problem here. AFAIK, when you select DU's partition tab, it shows the current partitioning state. On a new HD, that's one. If you create multiple partitions, then they're created. If you didn't create the second partition, then, as Kappy stated, you need to start from scratch and create the partitons at the same time.

  • How much to partition on External HD for Time Machine?

    Hi- I have an 80GB MacBook. I have a new External HD that has 500GB. How much space should I partition so that I can run Time Machine? WIll 100GB do the trick,or should I use more? Thanks for your advice. -Tim

    JG!
    Whew, am I blushing! I totally missed the FAQ-I just came to the forums and started searching for the answer and just blew by the FAQ. My aplogies. Thanks for directing me that way. I appreciate it.
    pat

  • Basic Question:  How to partition an external drive and then set up TM?

    Hi. I am going to be using an external hard drive (Western Digital - 640GB) on my MacBook for the first time and I think that I'd like to partition it so that part of it is for Time Machine and part of it can be used to just manually drag and drop my files (like any other USB external drive).
    1. How to I partition the external drive for Mac?
    2. If I insert my drive (not yet partitioned) in my MacBook for the first time and the MacBook automatically asks me if I want to use it for Time Machine, I'm assuming that I need to say "no" so that I can first partition it, right? If yes, then after partitioning it how do I set up the one partition for Time Machine?
    3. If I have 640 GB external hard drive space and my MacBook has about 100GB of space, how much of the 640 should I allocate for Time Machine?
    Thanks! Happy New Year!

    coffeecoffee wrote:
    Hi. I am going to be using an external hard drive (Western Digital - 640GB) on my MacBook for the first time and I think that I'd like to partition it so that part of it is for Time Machine and part of it can be used to just manually drag and drop my files (like any other USB external drive).
    1. How to I partition the external drive for Mac?
    select the whole drive (the model, not the name) in disk utility and click on the partition tab. set the number of partitions. set the partition scheme to GUID in options. set the format to mac os extended journaled. hit apply.
    2. If I insert my drive (not yet partitioned) in my MacBook for the first time and the MacBook automatically asks me if I want to use it for Time Machine, I'm assuming that I need to say "no" so that I can first partition it, right? If yes, then after partitioning it how do I set up the one partition for Time Machine?
    in system preferences->Time machine.
    also see TM 101 for basic usage instructions.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1427
    3. If I have 640 GB external hard drive space and my MacBook has about 100GB of space, how much of the 640 should I allocate for Time Machine?
    it depends on your computing habits but it's generally recommended to have TM drive to be at least 2-3 times bigger than the total amount of data you are backing up.
    Thanks! Happy New Year!

  • Windows and OS-X partitions on external drive

    Has anyone had any experience/problems with partitioning an external drive for OS-X and Windows?
    How about 3 partitons: HFS+, FAT32, NTFS. Or is that pushing my luck too far?
    I just received a new LaCie, primarily for backing up Vista Ult 64-bit, but if I can also use it for XP and OS-X that would be great.
    Any information will be most appreciated.
    Message was edited by: nerowolfe

    Moonlight Mac wrote:
    I've used an external USB2 drive to boot XP, but it is a very dicy process, and not really worth it in the end. You can slipstream USB boot support into the XP installer, but when you are done, you won't have virtual memory support (no pagefile). It also requires that the internal drive be removed during installation (if XP sees an internal drive, it will insist on attempting to use it for a pagefile.)
    I've done the same with a 4GB flash memory card... but booting was hit or miss.
    I've partitioned my internal into 2 HFS and 1 NTFS partition, and that works very well when combined with MacDrive on the PC side. I'd stick with using the external as just a backup device or for OSX (works best with firewire.)
    I am not looking to boot XP although that would be nice, but simply to create a backup on the drive. I use Norton Ghost, which does allow a boot, or sorts, into the backup in order to restore a system.
    But more, I was interested in an NTSF partition for Vista on this MBP. I have not used Vista's built-in backup program so I don't know how it works, but my thoughts were to partition the 500GB into multiple partitions and use them for XP, Leopard and Vista and a CCC clone of my two Leopard OSs.
    Say, 3 HFS partitions for clones and storage, 1 FAT32 for XP and 1 NTFS for Vista, making 5 in all.
    The 2 HFS partitions are probably easy. It was the other two, FAT32 and NTFS that I was concerned with.
    I guess I will plug it in and use DU and see what happens. I have never used DU for NTFS or FAT32 on an external drive.
    As long as the drive is empty, I have nothing to lose and lots of experience to gain, right?

  • Partition Boot Camp for Win 7/Win XP

    So here's the story:  For about 3 years I had Boot Camp running on my Mac Mini under Win XP.  Then came the crash and I had to recreate the Boot Camp partition - this time with Win 7 because I was silly enough to upgrade my OS to 10.7.4 (it's 10.7.5 now).  Surprise - many XP programs aren't compatible with Win 7 -DOH! 
    So, gurus, my question is: Can I partition my Boot Camp partition so I can install Win XP and run my programs? 
    Second option:  I have an external HD with lots of empty space. Can I add an XP partition to it and run my Windows programs from there?  If I can, how do I do it?
    Thanks
    Mike

    Option 1 No
    Option 2 No
    Niel has the correct solution for you

  • Partitioning an external hard drive for Mac and PC

    I want to partition an external hard drive (3TB) into 3 even partitions. I want to use one for PC storage, one for Mac storage and the last for Mac backup. Is this possible and how do I do it?

    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 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) 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.
    7. Re-partition the drive to create the three partitions. The one you wish to use on a PC you should format MSDOS (FAT).
    When you connect the drive to your PC it should have no problem reading the partition set up for a PC. Now while on the PC you may wish to consider reformatting that partition using ExFAT (if supported on your PC.) This format is more compatible with both OS X and NTSF supporting long file names and other FAT filesystem irregularities.

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