I have an old external hard drive (Western Digital passport) which when plugged into my Mac it is not recognised, I'm guessing this is because it has been configured for a windows based PC however I would like to access it using my Mac. Any ideas?
24-02-13, 04:38 PM
(This post was last modified: 25-02-13, 10:49 AM by Lazarus.)
dont listen to me - apparently Im talking bollox!
"Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways - Chardonnay in one hand - strawberries in the other - body thoroughly used up, totally worn out, and screaming - WOO HOO! What a Ride!"
If it's not corrupted or an otherwise duff drive you should be able to read and write if it's FAT32 formatted. If it's NTFS i think there is a utility that'll let you read, but not write to it.
OK. I was thinking there was data on it that you might want.
On my Mac I usually format USB drives FAT32 rather than HFS, it's often a handy way to transfer large files to and from Windows boxes.
FAT32 is also recognised widely by Linux systems so its a very handy format to use. The drawback is that the file size limit is 4GB (minus 1 byte) - for every day use this is fine though
Fat, fat32 and ntfs are all recognised on osx. I'd do a chkdsk in windows.
Ntfs may not work or may only be read able in osx prior to leopard.
Opinions are like A**holes, Everyone has one. Some people seem to have more than one though which is a bit odd.