Why use an NTFS formated drive for data files when using BootCamp?
you can purchase MacDrive to see, read and write to HFS+ formatted disks.
MacDrive is a great application for Windows, but useless for anything but transferring a few common file-types between the two OSes.
Why?
Very simple: it is only useful for seeing and transferring files BOTH OSes can use: i.e., "graphics, text, and some audio/video files types."
NEITHER OS can use the other's executable files. This is a VERY IMPORTANT distinction.
It seems to me that the BEST way to share such files between OSes would be by using a FAT32 partition on an external drive, since both OSes can format, see, and write to FAT32 partitions without third-party utilities such as MacDrive.
It is also the CHEAPEST way to do it reliably, considering that MacDrive is somewhere around $49US at present.
(You Mac folks might not be concerned by prices, but we Windows users ARE, since sometimes, our OS is more expensive than our machines.)
(yeah, yeah, I know: this is kinda stupid, in your opinions. Just so you will know, we tend to agree, and we do it in writing quite often.)
Adding an additional program which [basically] only adds the ability to see HFS+ partitions from within Windows is a waste of money, considering that just formatting a common data partition as FAT32 removes any such limitations, and at no further cost to the user, other than free disk space.
Donald L McDaniel