Windows Partition on an external drive

I have this set up with 2 internals with osX .9 on one for final cut & osX .6 for media 100i on the other( can't upgrade the os because of the version of Media 100). I have audio editing software for win2k or XP that isn't available for mac. I have a terrabyte of external for media (scsi & firewire)-can I partition one of these to boot to win2k?

"can I partition one of these to boot to win2k?"
No. Not with a PowerPC based Mac such as the Quicksilver you list in your profile. And not with an Intel based Mac, as the only version of Windows they will boot is XP and Vista

Similar Messages

  • Can i have my windows partition on an external drive?

    hello all,
         alright, so im looking at a laptop for college and after much research and a few trips to the apple store i want the new, 13-inch macbook pro, with retina display and a 256GB flash hard drive. i love this computer in every aspect except.... you guessed it, its small hard drive. i can always get external drives to make up the differance though, and their is always the cloud so i dont think ill have too much of a problem. but i do need to use some software for college that is only windows based. so rather then splitting up this already small hard drive can i just install windows onto my mac (because i already know i cant put windows on an external drive with boot camp) and make the entire windows partition on the external drive? this way im not losing any native space besides that used to hold windows and im not installing windows to an external drive so hopefully bootcamp wont have a hissey fit. can anyone tell me if this will work? or if this wont work can anyone give me any other solutions to having windows on my mac without splitting up my native hard drive? such as installing windows to my mac and making the partition in the cloud or something? just anything so i dont have to split my already small, yet extremally fast, 256GB hard drive.

    You can install Windows on your internal drive and store your Windows data on any drive you want to use. Keep in mind that any Windows programs you install in Windows will be installed on your internal drive. So make the Boot Camp partition large enough for Windows and any programs you may install now or in the future. You will also need room for swap/page files and other activities such as installing Windows updates.
    100GB will likely be a good size for the Boot Camp partition given that it is unknown what programs you will be installing.

  • Can't boot from Windows partition or any external drives...?

    My iMac just stopped booting from both my boot camp partition, and any external drives. I tried booting from a bootable flashdrive with drive genius installed, but it just booted OS X. Despite holding TAB, it just boots normally, as if I wasnt even holding it. I also tried installing rEFit, but OS X still ignores it and just boots normally. What's going on?!

    ...wow....nevermind, i just realized that i was hitting tab not option...good lord...ive been running boot camp for a long time too...alright well...thanks anyway lol

  • 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.

  • MacBook Air, can I partition my Mac external drive to have an ISO image file location for Windows downloads?

    Hi, in preparation for installing bootcamp and windows 7, and in the absence of a DVD drive on my MacBook Air, can I partition my Mac external drive to have an ISO image file location for Windows downloads?

    The Boot Camp instructions are located here: http://www.apple.com/support/bootcamp/
    The Boot Camp Discussion Community is located here: https://discussions.apple.com/community/windows_software/boot_camp

  • Success: moving bootcamp partition to an external drive

    Background
    Due to the relatively small, non-exchangable SSD on my Mac, I'd limited the bootcamp partition to 50GB when installing Windows. I needed to install new software in Windows, but was running out of space fast and didn't have the necessary space on the Windows side. I don't use Windows that often and for that reason, I wanted to move the Bootcamp partition to an external hard drive, freeing up space for the Mac side on the internal SSD. I'd read many conflicting reports on the web, some claiming they'd done it successfully, while others said it would be impossible, because Windows 7 wouldn't run from an external drive. I had a HDD in a USB 3 enclosure, and first tried to install Windows to this (using various guides on the web). I was very close to success with this USB 3 drive, but Windows would fail during start-up. Most reports claiming to have successfully been able to run Windows 7 from an external drive, had used Thunderbolt drives, so I decided to get myself a Lacie Rugged USB 3/Thunderbolt series Solid State Drive.
    Hardware used
    MacBook Pro 15" Retina Display (mid 2012), 2,3 GHz Intel Core i7, 8GB RAM, 250GB SSD
    Lacie Rugged USB 3/Thunderbolt series, 120GB Solid State Drive
    Software used
    Mac OS X Mavericks, 10.9.2
    Windows 7 Ultimate
    Plus several free downloads from the internet, see description below.
    Procedure
    Step 1: Get the Thunderbolt drive to work under your Bootcamp Windows 7 installation.
    This should be simple enough, but proved to be a little tricky. Here’s what I did (assumes you are running Mac OS X before you begin):
    1. Make sure your Thunderbolt drive is disconnected before proceeding.
    2. Restart your Mac and hold down the option key (alt key on some keyboards) during startup.
    3. Choose the Windows drive to start up Windows 7 on your Bootcamp partition.
    4. After log in to Windows 7, download the necessary driver software for your Thunderbolt drive (find it at the manufacturer’s homepage of your Thunderbolt drive - in my case lacie.com).
    5. If the downloaded driver installer is in a compressed format (like zip for example) be sure to decompress it before running the driver installer.
    6. Shut down your computer.
    7. Connect your Thunderbolt drive to your computer.
    8. Start up in Windows 7 (see items 2 & 3 above) and if it all went well, you should now be able to see your Thunderbolt drive under Start>Computer.
    Step 2: Format your Thunderbolt drive in NTFS-format.
    Still running Windows 7 with your Thunderbolt drive connected and visible to the system, it is now time to format your external Thunderbolt drive in NTFS-format. There are several ways of doing this. I used the procedure described here at tedhhack.co.uk.
    Step 3: Follow the directions at intowindows.com to clean install Windows 7 onto your external Thunderbolt drive.
    As described at intowindows.com, this involves downloading Windows Automated Installation Kit (WAIK) and running command line tools. At step 9 in the described process at intowindows.com, at the point where the installer asks if the drive you are installing to is a USB hard disk, the correct input is Y for yes, even if your external drive is a Thunderbolt drive (and obviously not a USB hard disk).
    At step 10 in the described process at intowindows.com (Reboot your PC), remember to hold down the option (or alt) key at every restart in the installation process, so as not to start up in Mac OS X. Also, since your machine now has two Windows 7 installations, Windows Boot Manager will appear and ask you to “Choose an operating system to start” and there is a list of two Windows.
    I don’t know how to tell which one is on the external drive and which one is on the internal drive at this point, but I started with the top one on the list and this turned out to be the one I wanted (the newly installed one on the external drive). If you pick the wrong one (on the internal drive) at first, simply restart the computer and choose the other one. You know you got the right one when the installation process continues and asks for further input.
    After the Windows installation is complete (there will be at least one other restart required - remember to hold down the option (alt) key to start up in Windows, and choose the same Windows on the list in the Windows Boot Manager), you’ll be running a freshly installed, but crippled Windows 7, as you still haven’t installed the specific drivers for your hardware. But don’t worry, that will be fixed in the next step.
    Step 4: Clone your Bootcamp partition from your internal drive to the external Thunderbolt drive.
    In this step you will copy all the software, drivers, settings and other files from your Bootcamp partition on your internal drive to your external Thunderbolt drive. The easiest way to do that is to clone your Windows partition - and to that end you’ll need to download some free software: AOMEI Backupper Standard 2.0 fits the bill perfectly, as it will let you clone at the same time as resizing the partition to fit your external Thunderbolt drive (I went from a 50GB internal Bootcamp partition to a 120GB external Thunderbolt SSD).
    1. Download  AOMEI Backupper Standard 2.0 (I used the 17MB download for Windows 7), install it, and run it.
    2. In the left column choose “Clone” and in the right column choose “Partition Clone”. By choosing Partition Clone instead of Disk clone, you won’t ruin the newly created (but invisible) boot partition on the external Thunderbolt drive.
    3. Press Next and choose your internal Bootcamp partition as the Source Disk.
    4. Press Next again and choose your external Thunderbolt drive (your newly installed Windows 7) as the Destination Disk.
    5. Press Next again and you’ll get a warning that you will erase the contents of the destination partition and it asks if this is what you really want to do. Press Yes to this question.
    6. Next screen is an Operation Summery. Toward the bottom of the Operation Summery screen there are a few interesting options: Edit Size of Partition, Clone Sector by Sector and Align Partition to Optimize for SSD.
    7. If your destination partition is larger than your source destination like mine was, press Edit Size of Partition. This will take you to another screen, where you can drag to resize the partition. I dragged this all the way to the right to give Windows 7 the full size of my external Thunderbolt drive.
    8. Leave the checkbox Clone Sector by Sector unchecked.
    9. If your external Thunderbolt drive is an SSD, put a check in the checkbox entitled Align Partition to Optimize for SSD.
    10. Now press the Start Clone button.
    11. When the cloning process is done, exit AOMEI Backupper and restart your computer (holding down the option or alt key) to start up in your new clone of your old Windows 7 with all the same software, drivers, settings and files.
    Step 5: Enjoy running all your Windows 7 applications from your external Thunderbolt drive!
    Step 6: Here is where I need help/advice – can I remove the Bootcamp partition on my internal drive now?
    I am reluctant to entirely remove the Bootcamp partition from my internal drive, as I am unsure whether this will disable me from starting up in Windows. I would love to hear from anyone here with insight on the matter.

    Step 6: Here is where I need help/advice – can I remove the Bootcamp partition on my internal drive now?
    To answer my own question in Step 6 above, no, or at least I haven't found a way yet...
    Here's what I've done so far:
    Used the Bootcamp Assistant to remove the bootcamp partition on my internal drive.
    Booted the system with the option (alt) key pressed down and now there was NO Windows drive to choose.
    Therefore I used the Bootcamp Assistant to install Windows back onto my internal drive (including installing Bootcamp drivers in the Windows environment). This time I chose the minimum partition of 20GB for the Windows installation on the internal drive.
    Booted into the new Windows on the internal drive and installed the drivers for my Thunderbolt drive.
    Restarted with the option (alt) key pressed down, chose the Windows drive, but Windows Boot Manager still didn't pop up to allow me to choose the Windows installation on the external Thunderbolt drive.
    Booted from the Windows DVD and chose Repair.
    Restarted with the option (alt) key pressed down, chose the Windows drive, and now Windows Boot Manager finally popped up, which allowed me to choose the Windows installation on the external Thunderbolt drive again, phew!
    So, I can run Windows 7 from the external Thunderbolt drive, but I have to use 20GB of my internal drive for a Windows installation I'll never use. Not the best solution, but at least I've saved 30GB of space compared to my previous Bootcamp partition - and I now have enough space to install the Windows 7 software I need on the external Thunderbolt drive...

  • Can VirtualBox+BootCamp install Windows 7 on an external drive?

    There are a lot of good comments on these ideas, but I can't quite figure out if I can do this or not. I have an 18GB partition on an external drive. I have OS X 10.6.8 (with BootCamp) and a Windows 7 Home Premium disc. If I install VirtualBox (on my mac with Leopard? on the extenal drive?), can I ask BootCamp to install Windows on the extenal drive? I'll gladly tromp through the manuals if I know this will work.
    The reason I want to do this is to keep all that Windows goop out of my mac. If this is possible, does the external habitat provide any additional protection against Bad Internet? I'll be working in Windows offline anyway. If Windows is installed on my mac and I'm online–but booted in Leopard–would I face any greater risks than if Windows was absent? Thanks.

    You have downloaded, read and checked out VirtualBox? doesn't sound like it.
    Running Windows natively and dual booting plus using in a VM only works with the commercial VMs.
    Comparison of VMware Fusion Parallels VirtualBox
    Comparison Fusion and Parallels
    Yes, a VM only being only a file, can reside anywhere you want, though the speed and performance of the drive does matter.
    Users doing things like opening email and clicking on links is goop. Even off line, use Microsoft Security Essentials - and stay patched current and such.
    Only in rare setup will Windows work on external drive if the PC not Mac has the motherboard support.

  • I am trying to back up a Mavericks partition to a partition on my external drive.

    I am trying to back up a Mavericks partition to a partition on my external drive. I have erased the partition on the external drive but I keep getting an error message that the back up drive is full. I also have Snow Leopard backed up to the other partition on the external drive. When I first tried this, Time Machine tried to back up the entire MacBook Pro drive on the same external drive partition. It's as if it doesn't recognize the Mavericks partition on the Mac drive. Also, I can't delete the empty partition on the miniStack external drive.
    Any help will be appreciated. Thanks!
    Gerald
    2009 MacBook Pro, 10.9.2, 2.8 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo

    Are you trying to backup to an external HD connected to your computer, or a wireless HD interfaced to an iPad?
    Mac - How to Move the iPhone & iPad iTunes Backup folder to an External Hard Drive
    http://osxdaily.com/2011/03/05/how-to-move-the-iphoneipad-itunes-backup-folder-t o-an-external-hard-drive/
    How to Change the Location of Your iPhone Backup (Mac)
    http://ismashphone.com/2012/05/how-to-change-the-location-of-your-iphone-backup. html
    Windows - Change iPad default backup location
    http://apple-ipad-tablet-help.blogspot.com/2010/07/change-ipad-default-backup-lo cation.html
    Windows - Changing IPhone and iPad backup location
    http://goodstuff2share.wordpress.com/2011/05/22/changing-iphone-and-ipad-backup- location/
     Cheers, Tom

  • Using Disk Utility to create a partition on an external drive

    Hi Everyone
    I have a 250gb external HD drive which is currently split into two partitions of Fat32. I'd like to use this drive for storing images of OS X, but when I tried to create an image using the OS X startup DVD, I was told that FAT32 didn't allow large enough file sizes (or something along those lines) in order for me to backup my OS X.
    Disk Utility appears to offer the ability to split partitions on the external drive, i.e. I can select the largest of the two partitions and choose to split it into two 96gb partitions. However, will this be a destructive partition process, and can I reasonably expect my external hard disk to be reformatted with a 96gb Mac OS X formatted partition whilst still keeping two FAT32 partitions and all the data that resides on them?
    Any help is much appreciated!

    You will not be splitting existing partitions. Instead, you will be creating a new partitions from scratch.
    Run Disk Utility. Select the hard drive to be partitioned. Make sure you select the hard drive in the sidebar, not the volume indented below the drive. Go to the Partition tab. If you want one or more of the partitions to be MS-DOS, you must first click on the Options... button. Select the Master Boot Record option and OK. Select Volume Scheme of 3 Partitions. Now set up your three new partitions as you want them, in terms of size and format. For the Mac partition, select Mac OS Extended (Journaled) as the format.

  • Best way to set up partitions on 250GB external drive

    Hi all,
    I've decided to go with an Iomega eGo 250-GB FireWire portable drive to back up my iBook's hard disk (30 GB) plus to store my photos and maybe hold a bootable copy of OS9.
    This is my first time using an external drive, so I don't really know how to go about setting things up.
    What would be the best way to set up the partitions on the external drive?
    1) I know I should create a 30GB partition for the iBook backup, but what about for the remaining volume? Is it best to leave it as a single large 200GB partition, or split it into two 100GB chunks? Other than the clone of my iBook, I'll mainly be storing photos (at the moment no more than around 10-12GB).
    2) I don't yet have a huge iTunes collection, but if I later want to store iTunes music that doesn't fit on my internal drive, is it fine to put it in the same partition as the photos, or would it be preferable to create a separate partition?
    3) If I want to install OS9 on the drive, how much space should I allot to it? Would this enable me to run legacy apps on my iBook?
    4) Does it matter how I name the partitions (i.e. should the name for my iBook back-up be the same as the original volume or should it be different?)
    5) As I still don't know exactly what I need, If today I decide to create only 30GB partition to backup the iBook, can I later partition the remaining space without having to start all over again?
    6) Also, the drive came out of the box with Mac OS Extended format. Is this the best format or is there another that would be better?
    Thanks for any advice
    Message was edited by: Lutetia

    1) I know I should create a 30GB partition for the iBook backup, but what about for the remaining volume? Is it best to leave it as a single large 200GB partition, or split it into two 100GB chunks? Other than the clone of my iBook, I'll mainly be storing photos (at the moment no more than around 10-12GB).
    2) I don't yet have a huge iTunes collection, but if I later want to store iTunes music that doesn't fit on my internal drive, is it fine to put it in the same partition as the photos, or would it be preferable to create a separate partition?
    The answer to both question is that it's completely up to you. Partitioning or not partitioning won't affect operation significantly.
    3) If I want to install OS9 on the drive, how much space should I allot to it? Would this enable me to run legacy apps on my iBook?
    The iBook G4 can not boot from OS 9 so you would only be able to run OS 9 in the "classic" environment.
    4) Does it matter how I name the partitions (i.e. should the name for my iBook back-up be the same as the original volume or should it be different?)
    No
    5) As I still don't know exactly what I need, If today I decide to create only 30GB partition to backup the iBook, can I later partition the remaining space without having to start all over again?
    There are a few tools which promise the ability to change the partitioning without destroying the data on the drive. But you should never do this without making a backup of the data on the drive. Data loss can easily happen and in a big way.
    6) Also, the drive came out of the box with Mac OS Extended format. Is this the best format or is there another that would be better?
    That is the best format.

  • Is it possilbe to install Windows 7 in an external drive using Boot Camp

    Hi,
    Is it possilbe to install Windows 7 in an external drive using Boot Camp?  If yes, can you someone show me or direct me where I can find more info?
    Thanks a lot

    You're welcome anytime.
    Microsoft doesn't make it easy sometimes
    As for the harddisk it surely is possible.
    iFixit http://www.ifixit.com/Browse/MacBook jas repair manuals and/or MacSales http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/hard-drives/2.5-Notebook/SATA/DIY/ with videos on how-to.
    Stefan

  • Can I install Windows Applications on an External Drive?

    I would like to install Windows apps on an external drive. Is this possible?
    Windows Vista will of course reside on the internal drive. (on a 2009 Mac Mini)

    Is this possible?
    Only if the application is explicitly designated as being portable. It may work for other applications, but isn't guaranteed to succeed, as most Windows applications modify the registry when installed and/or use system components.
    (46573)

  • How can I mount a Raid set (partition in an external drive)?

    Hi,
    I have 3 partitions in my external drive. I tried to create a concatenated Raid from 2 of the partitions. However, I end up with an offline Raid Slice (one of the partitions is under this slice) which is grayed out in Disk Utility.
    When I try to delete the Raid Set, I get "Deleting RAID set failed. This RAID configuration is not valid" warning. When I try to erase the RAID volume, I get "Volume Erase failed with the error:The chosen size is not valid for the chosen filesystem." warning. I cannot mount the volume either.
    So, I have 2 of the 3 partitions mounted. The 3rd partition (which is under RAID) is unmounted. Do you have any suggestions to have access to the 3rd partition?
    Thanks.

    Why are you trying to RAID two partitions on the same drive? Aside from the fact that it doesn't work it also makes no sense when you can simply create a larger partition by joining the two into one.

  • How choose which partition of my external drive I use for my network

    Hi,
    I just bought a Linksys E3200 router for my network house. The setup was easy and everything work fine... well.. almost everything. I have a Iomega 1To external drive whit 2 partition ; the first one is a mac os extend for my Time Machine backup and the second one is NTSF for sharing my picture and music. I use the cisco connect software for setup my storage whit my external drive but I can't see the NTSF part. I can write/read in my mac partition but I don't want to use that part on my network.
    My question is : Can I have 2 partition on my network? If not, how can I choose the partition I wanna use.
    Thanks.
    PS: I'm sur you notice it but english isnt my first language, sorry if isn't clear.

    ksu62 wrote:
    The infection names are:  classload.jar-719ef6a5.zip
                                              classload.jar-5db452le31.zip
                                              ar3.jar-6ce3b2f-45l483f.zip
                                              classload.jar-lef99412-63bsd3fl.zip
    Those look alot like file names and not infection names. I don't find any reference to anything like that on Norton or VirusTotal. Since you said these were Trojans, I would expect to see "Trojan" as part of the infection name.
    ".jar" files are executable Java applets. The random alpha-numerics would seem to indicate a cache file, likely from a browser with Java enabled. And we all know what ".zip" means.
    Worst case is that you had Java enabled in a browser and were infected by one of the late variants of the Flashback Trojan over a year ago or one of a couple of other attacks using the same vulnerability but targetted against a small number of political sympathizers. Much more probable is that thes were Windows only Trojans. Hopefully you have a fully up-to-date OS X, including Java, and have disabled Java in all your browsers by now.

  • Installing windows and booting from external drive

    I just got a Seagate 250gb external drive. I only have cords to connect it to my I-mac with usb cords from its dock but the drive itself has a firewire port. What i want to do is install windows xp onto the seagate drive so the drive can stay Windows formatted and my mac drive can stay mac formatted so both OS's will run at peak efficiency. The only reason i want to be able to boot up from the drive is so i can use my I-macs hardware but be able to play my PC games in its windows OS.
    How do i accomplish this?

    Assuming it's an Intel iMac since you're installing Windows®, Intel Macs can boot off of USB, but...
    USB2 is slow compared to Firewire/400 even, about 1/2 to 2/3rds the spedd, so FW would be better.
    How to format your disks...
    http://www.kenstone.net/fcphomepage/partitioningtiger.html
    Open Disk Utility, format the external MacOS Extended Journalled, and don't forget the GUID partitioning at the bottom of that link.
    Then...
    Get carbon copy cloner to make an exact copy of your old HD to the New one...
    http://www.bombich.com/software/ccc.html
    SuperDuper...
    http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/
    Or the most expensive one & my favorite, Tri-Backup...
    http://www.tri-edre.com/english/tribackup.html
    Clone your internal to the External.
    Reboot and hold the Option Key down at bootup & select the external drive to boot from, test it all out.

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