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ozziegn

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Aug 16, 2007
1,311
844
Central FL Area
I'm trying send some files over to my external hard drive but it won't let me. it keeps telling me I don't have permission to do that.

this is my external hard drive that I've been using on my PC platform for roughly 2 years which I know works just fine.

any ideas?
 

vanmacguy

macrumors 6502a
Aug 13, 2007
586
0
Not where you live.
Do you know how the External hard drive was formatted?

If it was formatted with NTFS permissions, you won't be able to write to it. If it's FAT32 then you've got another problem.

Cheers.
 

ozziegn

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Aug 16, 2007
1,311
844
Central FL Area
You'll have to take the files off using a Windows machine, reformat the drive using something other than NTFS, and then put them back on.

so could I copy all my external hard drive files to my Mac hard drive and then reformat the external within the Mac OS? if so, can I assume that my Windows side will be able to read and write to this as well?
 

Eidorian

macrumors Penryn
Mar 23, 2005
29,190
386
Indianapolis
so could I copy all my external hard drive files to my Mac hard drive and then reformat the external within the Mac OS? if so, can I assume that my Windows side will be able to read and write to this as well?
If you don't have any individual files over 4 GB then FAT32 would work for moving data between OS X and Windows.

Windows cannot write to HFS+ formatted drivers without additional software. You can at least read with HFSExplorer.
 

vanmacguy

macrumors 6502a
Aug 13, 2007
586
0
Not where you live.
so could I copy all my external hard drive files to my Mac hard drive and then reformat the external within the Mac OS? if so, can I assume that my Windows side will be able to read and write to this as well?

You are correct. And as long as you don't reformat the drive using a Mac specific format, so use FAT32 (but it's a shame you're still using the drive for Windows as a Mac specific format is much better on a Mac), then you'll be able to read and write from Windows as well.

Good luck.
 

ozziegn

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Aug 16, 2007
1,311
844
Central FL Area
You are correct. And as long as you don't reformat the drive using a Mac specific format, so use FAT32 (but it's a shame you're still using the drive for Windows as a Mac specific format is much better on a Mac), then you'll be able to read and write from Windows as well.

Good luck.

alright, so here's my plan. I will copy all my files to my Mac hard drive and then I will reformat the external drive. can I reformat it within the Mac OS using FAT32 or no?

*edit*

okay. I just tried to reformat the external within the Mac OS and there's an option that says MS-Dos something. can I assume this will be FAT32 so I can access these files within Windows if needed?
 

vanmacguy

macrumors 6502a
Aug 13, 2007
586
0
Not where you live.
alright, so here's my plan. I will copy all my files to my Mac hard drive and then I will reformat the external drive. can I reformat it within the Mac OS using FAT32 or no?

*edit*

okay. I just tried to reformat the external within the Mac OS and there's an option that says MS-Dos something. can I assume this will be FAT32 so I can access these files within Windows if needed?

You are correct. Use MS-Dos and you'll be able to use the drive from both Mac and Windows.

Let us know how you do.

Cheers.
 

Eric Piercey

macrumors 6502
Nov 29, 2006
266
5
Perpetual Bondage
Move the files to your Mac, format it HFS+, move them back, share the drive from the Mac using freeware like sharepoints and call it a day. Both the PC and the Mac will have read-write access without any file size issues. (Assuming you've got both machines on the same LAN, which you should- if you don't go buy a router for 40 bucks)
 
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