Apr 21, 2017 - However there is a simple solution – you can format the drive to FAT32. You can format your external hard drive from either the PC or Mac. WD My Book would be best for desktop, Seagate Backup Plus Slim would be.
In this guide we're using exFAT instead of FAT32, another filesystem that both Windows and Mac can read and write to, because FAT32 has a maximum 4GB file size limit whereas exFAT can work with files as large as 16EB (exabytes). ExFAT also performs better than FAT32. You can format the drive from either the Mac or the Windows machine.
However, if you want to use part of the drive for OS X's Time Machine backups, you should do this from the Mac, since there's an extra step to make the drive compatible for Time Machine. How to Format an External Drive in OS X 1. Connect the drive to the Mac. Open Disk Utility. The easiest way to do that is hit CMD and the spacebar at the same time and type in Disk Utility to find the program. Select the drive you want to format.
If you don't plan on using the drive for Time Machine, skip steps 5 to 11 below and continue with step 12. Give the drive a descriptive name and leave the default settings: OS X Extended format and GUID partition map. These will format the drive in OS X's HFS+ filetype so it will be compatible with Time Machine. Click Erase and OS X will format the drive. With the drive selected in Disk Utility, click Partition. Enter the amount of space you want to set aside for Time Machine. In this example, we're shrinking the Time Machine partition to 128 GB instead of allowing Time Machine to take up the whole drive.
Select the new untitled partition so we can format it as exFAT for use with both Mac and Windows. Give the partition a name and select exFAT for the format. Click Erase to finish.
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Your exFAT-formatted drive or partition can now be used for both Windows and Mac. Note that using a drive frequently between Windows and Mac could increase the chances of file corruption, so make sure you have backups of the files on the shared drive and be extra careful about safely ejecting the drive before disconnecting it from your computer. How to Format an External Drive in Windows The instructions below are for Windows 10, but other versions of Windows from Windows 7 and up can also format an external drive as exFAT for use with Mac as well. Connect the drive to your Windows PC.
Open the Disk Management tool. You can do that by typing 'disk format' or 'disk management' in Windows search or going to Control Panel Administrative Tools Create and format hard disk partitions.
Right-click on the external drive's partition or unallocated space you want to format and choose New Simple Volume 4. Follow the wizard to choose a volume size. Assign a drive letter. Choose exFAT as the file system in the Format Partition screen. Give the volume a new name. Click Finish. Windows will format the drive as exFAT and you'll be able to use the drive on both Windows and Mac.
Ok, maybe i’m not understanding, but i’m still a bit confused. My Passport is already formatted for Macs.
From what i’m understanding the NTFS is made to make Passports that are formatted for PCs useable on Macs. I don’t need that.
I need something that i can download on a PC to make my Passport work on a PC. Is there a NTFS program that i can download on a PC to format it? Or is the FAT32 program made so i can download it on a PC to format my Passport to be PC useable? I hope i’m being clear, if not i’m sorry.
Like I said, computers aren’t my thing. Thanks for your help again.