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Solve : Moving files from a pc to a mac? |
Answer» Okay, so I know that to move files from a certain PC to my Macbook I need an external hard drive (or some other method, but this is the one I'll be USING).. but my question is this: Will do! I'm gonna work on it tonight, so i'll give word on how it goes, thanks for the help! sorry I'm late to the game. If the hard drive says "for Pc's" it could be formatted one of two ways: FAT or NTFS. If it's FAT, when you hook it up to your mac it should show up on the desktop. If it's NTFS, you'll need to format the drive in disk utility (on your mac) as a FAT drive, so you can use it on windows and on mac.Quote from: socrates on December 29, 2009, 12:59:33 PM sorry I'm late to the game. I wasn't sure about any of that, just stumbling through with what I could find on the internet Odd though, you'd think that they would have support for NTFS by now.Quote from: Quantos on December 29, 2009, 01:09:03 PM I wasn't sure about any of that, just stumbling through with what I could find on the internet I'm not sure, but NTFS might be patented in some way by MS. More likely, Apple was more then happy with the HPFS file system, which works at least as well. I'm surprised that they ever preformat drives for you anymore.reposting from the wrong thread haha.. Well, the process was a little confusing, but worked easily enough. I had to install it & such on my PC, but when I plugged it in to my Mac it worked perfect. I didn't have to run anything or set up anything, and the files were easy to get off. So I guess my little Mac knew just what to do all along! Thanks for taking your time out to help me though. No problem. Glad you got it sorted out. That wrong thread post was pretty funny though. Perfect timing.Quote from: Quantos on December 29, 2009, 01:09:03 PM I wasn't sure about any of that, just stumbling through with what I could find on the internet I think BC is right in that it has to do with patents by microsoft. And actually I should CLARIFY on a few points: Mac OS X can READ NTFS without issue. However, it cannot write to NTFS (likely for the same reason BC mentioned). More confusing though is the fact that Microsoft doesn't support READING HFS+ Partitions, when you can do so without having to pay for patent infringements. In fact, you can download an extension for Vista/7 that allow you to read and write to HFS+ partitions. I did that on my Windows 7 machine and it works great. hotelgirl: I'm glad you got it working. Since it worked out the box it must have been FAT formatted from the get-go. Thanks for letting us know it worked!Thanks for clarifying that Socrates. |
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