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Format a NTFS hard drive in 10.3 | 28 comments | Create New Account
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You didn't format it as NTFS if you used Disk Utility. Unless you chose a Mac /Unix format, you formated it as FAT32 (there is a world of difference).
Also, most likely you didn't need to take the steps of booting off the OS X install disc to do this. I think Disk Utility confuses most people with regards to formating a volume versus formating a drive.
Maybe you should read a hint twice before you decide to comment on it. Also, most likely you didn't need to take the steps of booting off the OS X install disc to do this. I think Disk Utility confuses most people with regards to formating a volume versus formating a drive.
1.) He never said that he formatted it as NTFS. He said that it was already NTFS, and he wanted to format it. Disk Utility won't let you format a volume that's already NTFS. It will, however, let you format the disk using the method he described.
2.) He didn't boot up from an install disk. He was about to, but he tried this solution first.
Sorry, I thought we were speaking *English* here. 'Format a NTFS hard drive' means that you're going to end up with a NTFS hard drive. 'Reformat a NTFS hard drive' means the format will be whatever you are capable of choosing.
This isn't a nitpick, this is about searching this site or the web in general for information on how to format a drive as NTFS in OS X, and finding this hint headline and having to read through to get an ambiguous explanation of what he was trying to achieve.
The whole post is even more ambiguous when you read that he apparently put the drive back in the PC before donating it.
The *hint* here should've been about the difference between re/formating a drive and a volume.
This isn't a nitpick, this is about searching this site or the web in general for information on how to format a drive as NTFS in OS X, and finding this hint headline and having to read through to get an ambiguous explanation of what he was trying to achieve.
The whole post is even more ambiguous when you read that he apparently put the drive back in the PC before donating it.
The *hint* here should've been about the difference between re/formating a drive and a volume.
You are an idiot; it is quite obvious what they are saying
An adjective before a noun describes the noun in present tense.
If I said 'please get me the NTFS hard drive', one would get me a hard drive formatted in NTFS, so why then would 'format a NTFS hard drive' mean 'get a drive and format it to the NTFS standard'?
To describe future tense one would place the adjective after the noun like in the above sentance or in 'format a hard drive to NTFS'.
Thanks for the tip, I'll need it in the next few days
An adjective before a noun describes the noun in present tense.
If I said 'please get me the NTFS hard drive', one would get me a hard drive formatted in NTFS, so why then would 'format a NTFS hard drive' mean 'get a drive and format it to the NTFS standard'?
To describe future tense one would place the adjective after the noun like in the above sentance or in 'format a hard drive to NTFS'.
Thanks for the tip, I'll need it in the next few days
'Create a new file.'
If adjectives always referred to nouns as they currently exist, then you'd be told to 'create a nonexistent file.' I think this is relevant given the fact that a drive can be unformatted, and the act of formatting would create an NTFS-formatted hard drive.
I understand that this might be getting a little intellectual here, but there's no reason to assault anyone.
If adjectives always referred to nouns as they currently exist, then you'd be told to 'create a nonexistent file.' I think this is relevant given the fact that a drive can be unformatted, and the act of formatting would create an NTFS-formatted hard drive.
I understand that this might be getting a little intellectual here, but there's no reason to assault anyone.
'Create a new file' -- Create a ( new file ) -- Create a file which has the quality of being new.
'Format an NTFS disk' -- Format an ( NTFS Disk ) -- Format a disk which has the quality of being NTFS.
To make this even more clear, consider:
'Smash an NTFS disk'.
The author of the original post knows English well enough to write a simple sentance. 'Macslut' is both rude and ignorant.
It would be interesting to know how to 'NTFS format a drive' or 'format a drive with NTFS' using a mac.
'Format an NTFS disk' -- Format an ( NTFS Disk ) -- Format a disk which has the quality of being NTFS.
To make this even more clear, consider:
'Smash an NTFS disk'.
The author of the original post knows English well enough to write a simple sentance. 'Macslut' is both rude and ignorant.
It would be interesting to know how to 'NTFS format a drive' or 'format a drive with NTFS' using a mac.
'Macslut is both rude and ignorant.'
Great, at least 3 people have posted here that they were confused about what the title meant. I'm the first to point it out, get called idiotic, and now called ignorant by you, and somehow I'm the rude one.
'It would be interesting to know how to 'NTFS format a drive' or 'format a drive with NTFS' using a mac.'
I totally agree, which is why I clicked on the article's title in the first place (thinking it could not be done). Apparently, I'm not alone as others see the confusion as well. By the rules of our English language, it is an ambiguously written title. Disagree and call me every 4 letter word in the book, but it doesn't change the *fact* that as demonstrated, the article's title confuses people.
Great, at least 3 people have posted here that they were confused about what the title meant. I'm the first to point it out, get called idiotic, and now called ignorant by you, and somehow I'm the rude one.
'It would be interesting to know how to 'NTFS format a drive' or 'format a drive with NTFS' using a mac.'
I totally agree, which is why I clicked on the article's title in the first place (thinking it could not be done). Apparently, I'm not alone as others see the confusion as well. By the rules of our English language, it is an ambiguously written title. Disagree and call me every 4 letter word in the book, but it doesn't change the *fact* that as demonstrated, the article's title confuses people.
I am the original poster of this hint. I see now how the title could have been confusing or misleading. Perhaps I should have called it 'DE-format an NTSF hard drive in 10.3.
It was my first post on this site, and I apologize for any confusion.
That said, I do have to comment on one thing. Macslut, I can understand why you may have been confused by the title of the hint, but based on your first comment in this thread, it seems you didn't understand the hint itself either.
I guess the lesson to learn from this is to take a moment to think and proofread before clicking the SUBMIT COMMENT button.
It was my first post on this site, and I apologize for any confusion.
That said, I do have to comment on one thing. Macslut, I can understand why you may have been confused by the title of the hint, but based on your first comment in this thread, it seems you didn't understand the hint itself either.
I guess the lesson to learn from this is to take a moment to think and proofread before clicking the SUBMIT COMMENT button.
'Great, at least 3 people have posted here that they were confused about what the title meant. I'm the first to point it out, get called idiotic, and now called ignorant by you, and somehow I'm the rude one.'
If 3 people here think that the title is something other than what it was, then there are two non-mutually exclusive possibilities: a) The title is misleading, or b) The 3 people are ignorant.
We have established that a) is not the case, which implies that b) is the case. Please move on.
If 3 people here think that the title is something other than what it was, then there are two non-mutually exclusive possibilities: a) The title is misleading, or b) The 3 people are ignorant.
We have established that a) is not the case, which implies that b) is the case. Please move on.
---'Create a new file.'
If adjectives always referred to nouns as they currently exist, then you'd be told to 'create a nonexistent file.---
The word 'new' in that example is completely unnecessary. You wouldn't tell someone to create an old file or create a current file. Strictly speaking, the sentance fragment should read 'create a file'.
---I think this is relevant given the fact that a drive can be unformatted, and the act of formatting would create an NTFS-formatted hard drive.---
A drive could be unformatted and a drive could be formatted as NTFS but this is not relivant to the sentance in question.
---If you think it was so obvious as to what the hint said that the drive was ultimately formated as, then please tell us what the format of the drive became after the hint was applied.---
Arbitrary; the hint is completely unrelated to which format the poster needed the drive in, all the matters is that the format itself was unavailable.
---Meanwhile, this page will live in search indexes as '10.3' 'format' 'NTFS' 'hard drive'. While those of us know that you can't currently format a NTFS drive with the current version of Disk Utility, I bet many who would search and find this would be confused.---
But if I wanted to find out how to format an NTFS drive into, as an example, unpartitioned space, wouldn't I still search for '10.3', 'format' and 'NTFS'?
---The fact that it was originally NTFS really had nothing to do with the hint. The author was confused about the differences between formating a volume versus formating a drive. Had the drive been formated in other ways to begin with, the same problem could've occurred and the same solution could be possible.---
That is a rediculous comment, have you actually tried out what you say? If you go to Disk Utility it will show the erase option as being available in most situations whether you choose the disk or the partition unless the drive is the currently active boot drive. What the author says is that a mounted NTFS drive can not be erased until it is unmounted but non-boot HFS/+ drives certainly can be.
---Ah, but the author said the equivalent to 'please get me *a* NTFS hard drive' which unlike your example, implies that *any* hard drive could be obtained and made NTFS to satisfy the request.---
The only problem with that statement is that the author didn't say 'please get me a' and the sentance 'format a NTFS..' is completely different.
If adjectives always referred to nouns as they currently exist, then you'd be told to 'create a nonexistent file.---
The word 'new' in that example is completely unnecessary. You wouldn't tell someone to create an old file or create a current file. Strictly speaking, the sentance fragment should read 'create a file'.
---I think this is relevant given the fact that a drive can be unformatted, and the act of formatting would create an NTFS-formatted hard drive.---
A drive could be unformatted and a drive could be formatted as NTFS but this is not relivant to the sentance in question.
---If you think it was so obvious as to what the hint said that the drive was ultimately formated as, then please tell us what the format of the drive became after the hint was applied.---
Arbitrary; the hint is completely unrelated to which format the poster needed the drive in, all the matters is that the format itself was unavailable.
---Meanwhile, this page will live in search indexes as '10.3' 'format' 'NTFS' 'hard drive'. While those of us know that you can't currently format a NTFS drive with the current version of Disk Utility, I bet many who would search and find this would be confused.---
But if I wanted to find out how to format an NTFS drive into, as an example, unpartitioned space, wouldn't I still search for '10.3', 'format' and 'NTFS'?
---The fact that it was originally NTFS really had nothing to do with the hint. The author was confused about the differences between formating a volume versus formating a drive. Had the drive been formated in other ways to begin with, the same problem could've occurred and the same solution could be possible.---
That is a rediculous comment, have you actually tried out what you say? If you go to Disk Utility it will show the erase option as being available in most situations whether you choose the disk or the partition unless the drive is the currently active boot drive. What the author says is that a mounted NTFS drive can not be erased until it is unmounted but non-boot HFS/+ drives certainly can be.
---Ah, but the author said the equivalent to 'please get me *a* NTFS hard drive' which unlike your example, implies that *any* hard drive could be obtained and made NTFS to satisfy the request.---
The only problem with that statement is that the author didn't say 'please get me a' and the sentance 'format a NTFS..' is completely different.
-- Arbitrary; the hint is completely unrelated to which format the poster needed the drive in, all the matters is that the format itself was unavailable.
You mean that 'the ability to format' was unavailable, yes? The author never discusses if the NTFS format is available or not as an option. Apparently the author either didn't know or care what the drive was formatted as when he put it back in the PC. You and I both know that the format NTFS was not available as an option, but someone coming to this hint with know prior knowledge of this, and seeing that he ended up putting the drive back in the PC, has no way of knowing that the ability to format as NTFS is not an option.
-- But if I wanted to find out how to format an NTFS drive into, as an example, unpartitioned space, wouldn't I still search for '10.3', 'format' and 'NTFS'?
Sure, and ideally see an article with the title 'How to reformat an NTFS hard drive' or some of the other examples others have posted.
-- That is a rediculous comment, have you actually tried out what you say? If you go to Disk Utility it will show the erase option as being available in most situations whether you choose the disk or the partition unless the drive is the currently active boot drive. What the author says is that a mounted NTFS drive can not be erased until it is unmounted but non-boot HFS/+ drives certainly can be.
There are far more formats than NTFS/HFS/HFS Extended, and all kinds of partition combinations. The issue is the inability to erase a volume using Disk Utility that is in a format that Disk Utility itself can not create, unless you reformat the drive. It is at this point that you are limited to what Disk Utility can format a drive as (namely HFS, HFS Extended, FAT32 and UNIX).
-- The only problem with that statement is that the author didn't say 'please get me a' and the sentance 'format a NTFS..' is completely different.
You're quoting me out of context. The sentence 'Format a NTFS..' is much closer to 'Please get me a..' than it is to 'Please get me the..' which is the point I was making as a response to the post where 'Please get me the..' was used as an example.
I'm not *trying* to be pedantic here (honest, I'm not), I'm just pointing out what others have since reiterated, and that is the title of this hint is misleading.
You mean that 'the ability to format' was unavailable, yes? The author never discusses if the NTFS format is available or not as an option. Apparently the author either didn't know or care what the drive was formatted as when he put it back in the PC. You and I both know that the format NTFS was not available as an option, but someone coming to this hint with know prior knowledge of this, and seeing that he ended up putting the drive back in the PC, has no way of knowing that the ability to format as NTFS is not an option.
-- But if I wanted to find out how to format an NTFS drive into, as an example, unpartitioned space, wouldn't I still search for '10.3', 'format' and 'NTFS'?
Sure, and ideally see an article with the title 'How to reformat an NTFS hard drive' or some of the other examples others have posted.
-- That is a rediculous comment, have you actually tried out what you say? If you go to Disk Utility it will show the erase option as being available in most situations whether you choose the disk or the partition unless the drive is the currently active boot drive. What the author says is that a mounted NTFS drive can not be erased until it is unmounted but non-boot HFS/+ drives certainly can be.
There are far more formats than NTFS/HFS/HFS Extended, and all kinds of partition combinations. The issue is the inability to erase a volume using Disk Utility that is in a format that Disk Utility itself can not create, unless you reformat the drive. It is at this point that you are limited to what Disk Utility can format a drive as (namely HFS, HFS Extended, FAT32 and UNIX).
-- The only problem with that statement is that the author didn't say 'please get me a' and the sentance 'format a NTFS..' is completely different.
You're quoting me out of context. The sentence 'Format a NTFS..' is much closer to 'Please get me a..' than it is to 'Please get me the..' which is the point I was making as a response to the post where 'Please get me the..' was used as an example.
I'm not *trying* to be pedantic here (honest, I'm not), I'm just pointing out what others have since reiterated, and that is the title of this hint is misleading.
I'll try this again..
If you think it was so obvious as to what the hint said that the drive was ultimately formated as, then please tell us what the format of the drive became after the hint was applied.
Meanwhile, this page will live in search indexes as '10.3' 'format' 'NTFS' 'hard drive'. While those of us know that you can't currently format a NTFS drive with the current version of Disk Utility, I bet many who would search and find this would be confused.
The fact that it was originally NTFS really had nothing to do with the hint. The author was confused about the differences between formating a volume versus formating a drive. Had the drive been formated in other ways to begin with, the same problem could've occurred and the same solution could be possible.
Now on to English 101..
'If I said 'please get me the NTFS hard drive'..'
Ah, but the author said the equivalent to 'please get me *a* NTFS hard drive' which unlike your example, implies that *any* hard drive could be obtained and made NTFS to satisfy the request. Download adobe air for mac os x 10.5.8.
If you think it was so obvious as to what the hint said that the drive was ultimately formated as, then please tell us what the format of the drive became after the hint was applied.
Meanwhile, this page will live in search indexes as '10.3' 'format' 'NTFS' 'hard drive'. While those of us know that you can't currently format a NTFS drive with the current version of Disk Utility, I bet many who would search and find this would be confused.
The fact that it was originally NTFS really had nothing to do with the hint. The author was confused about the differences between formating a volume versus formating a drive. Had the drive been formated in other ways to begin with, the same problem could've occurred and the same solution could be possible.
Now on to English 101..
'If I said 'please get me the NTFS hard drive'..'
Ah, but the author said the equivalent to 'please get me *a* NTFS hard drive' which unlike your example, implies that *any* hard drive could be obtained and made NTFS to satisfy the request. Download adobe air for mac os x 10.5.8.
> Now to English 101
Yes, you do need to go to English 101. The hint does just what the author said it does.
Yes, you do need to go to English 101. The hint does just what the author said it does.
Ok, I would let this slide if, in addition to being an idiot, you didn't behave like an asshole.
Your claim that relative position of adjective vs. noun has any relation to tense is absolutely unfounded. In other words: this is complete and utter bullshit!
For those who want an argument beyond insults, I would just suggest to consider the phrase 'create a NTFS hard drive'.
As to the ambiguity of the title, I might add that 'format' in standard nomenclature is synonymous with 'create a file system'. The usual interpretation of 'format a NTFS hard drive' would therefore be 'create a filesystem of the type NTFS' (within a partion on a hard drive). The result would be a 'NTFS volume' using Macintosh terms.
From the hint it is not even clear if the poster actually 'formatted the drive', whether what he did affected the partition table (which is quite different between Mac and other systems), created a new file system, etc. It is therefore not clear if the resulting disk is even usable on a PC.
I'm not saying the hint is useless. Deleting data from a disk formatted with a file system not well supported by Mac OS X can certainly be necessary in some cases. It's just not what one would expect under the title 'format a NTFS drive'.
Your claim that relative position of adjective vs. noun has any relation to tense is absolutely unfounded. In other words: this is complete and utter bullshit!
For those who want an argument beyond insults, I would just suggest to consider the phrase 'create a NTFS hard drive'.
As to the ambiguity of the title, I might add that 'format' in standard nomenclature is synonymous with 'create a file system'. The usual interpretation of 'format a NTFS hard drive' would therefore be 'create a filesystem of the type NTFS' (within a partion on a hard drive). The result would be a 'NTFS volume' using Macintosh terms.
From the hint it is not even clear if the poster actually 'formatted the drive', whether what he did affected the partition table (which is quite different between Mac and other systems), created a new file system, etc. It is therefore not clear if the resulting disk is even usable on a PC.
I'm not saying the hint is useless. Deleting data from a disk formatted with a file system not well supported by Mac OS X can certainly be necessary in some cases. It's just not what one would expect under the title 'format a NTFS drive'.
I was confused by the hint's intent also. Was the drive finally to go back inside Windows box or for Mac?
Additionally, I had nothing but trouble trying to install a Windows OS on any disk formatted by a Mac as FAT32.
Windows could mount as external drive, but required reformatting with Partition Magic to actually install an OS. It reported as corrupted MFT in PM otherwise. All drives for Windows use get formatted using only Windows since for me.
Hopefully, that donation receipient doesn't go through what I did if that drive was meant to be put back inside the Windows tower.
Additionally, I had nothing but trouble trying to install a Windows OS on any disk formatted by a Mac as FAT32.
Windows could mount as external drive, but required reformatting with Partition Magic to actually install an OS. It reported as corrupted MFT in PM otherwise. All drives for Windows use get formatted using only Windows since for me.
Hopefully, that donation receipient doesn't go through what I did if that drive was meant to be put back inside the Windows tower.
Just one more comment here to clarify.
I was given a PC with XP on it and I knew of a group that would benefit from having the machine. I didn't want to just give the computer to them, because the hard drive still had all the data on it from the original donor.
Being lazy and a Mac snob, I didn't want to have to plug in everything to the PC only to boot if off a floppy and then format the hard drive, so I took the hard drive out of the PC and put it in an external enclosure, with plans on wiping the drive in OS X.
I wasn't able to do so, since NTFS drives are read only when mounted in OS X. I looked around on the web for solutions, and the only one I had found was to boot up off of a Mac OS install CD and then wipe the drive from there (which, in hindsite, is probably just doing the same thing that I described in the hint - formatting an unmounted drive).
That seemed to be too much work for me, so I experimented a bit and discovered the solution I posted about.
Now that the drive is wiped clean, I can give it (and the rest of the computer) to the youth group. I'll let them know that the drive needs to be formatted and that Windows needs to be installed.
My concern was in securing the donor's data (by destroying this copy of it), and in not having to do much. I accomplished both goals.
To remove the hard drive from the PC, I had to undo 6 screws in total, and 2 cables (power and IDE). To use my external USB2 enclosure, I just popped the lid off and plugged the drive in to power and IDE (didn't bother closing the enclosure). Now that the drive is wiped, I put it back into the PC (4 mounting screws, power and IDE cables, 2 screws to hold the case panel in place) and all is well.
Now back to being lazy..
I was given a PC with XP on it and I knew of a group that would benefit from having the machine. I didn't want to just give the computer to them, because the hard drive still had all the data on it from the original donor.
Being lazy and a Mac snob, I didn't want to have to plug in everything to the PC only to boot if off a floppy and then format the hard drive, so I took the hard drive out of the PC and put it in an external enclosure, with plans on wiping the drive in OS X.
I wasn't able to do so, since NTFS drives are read only when mounted in OS X. I looked around on the web for solutions, and the only one I had found was to boot up off of a Mac OS install CD and then wipe the drive from there (which, in hindsite, is probably just doing the same thing that I described in the hint - formatting an unmounted drive).
That seemed to be too much work for me, so I experimented a bit and discovered the solution I posted about.
Now that the drive is wiped clean, I can give it (and the rest of the computer) to the youth group. I'll let them know that the drive needs to be formatted and that Windows needs to be installed.
My concern was in securing the donor's data (by destroying this copy of it), and in not having to do much. I accomplished both goals.
To remove the hard drive from the PC, I had to undo 6 screws in total, and 2 cables (power and IDE). To use my external USB2 enclosure, I just popped the lid off and plugged the drive in to power and IDE (didn't bother closing the enclosure). Now that the drive is wiped, I put it back into the PC (4 mounting screws, power and IDE cables, 2 screws to hold the case panel in place) and all is well.
Now back to being lazy..
The point is that the title leads one to expect an article about how to put an NTFS file system on a disk using Mac OS X. You can argue as much as you like that technically that is not what the title says, but the fact is that I and probably lots of other people clicked on the link expecting to be shown how to create an NTFS file system on Mac OS X.
I agree with Macslut.
The title appears to imply creation of an NTFS, well that's what I assumed. Reading the paragraph explains what is actually happening.
Personally I would use the term 'Erase' rather than 'Format.'
This reminds me of the old days of floppy disks where you could format a disk then initialize a filesystem. Most people assumed that they were the one thing. Erasing the disk first and then creating the filesystem are two seperate steps.
Nowadays you don't need to low level format IDE disks.
Being a unix person I would erase a disk using DD
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/diskX
of course you still have to eject the disk before doing this.
you could also use /dev/random as the source device, to make the data even more confusing but I have found that /dev/random only produces 6 meg per second.
Gotta love unix as there is always more than one way to do it!!!
The title appears to imply creation of an NTFS, well that's what I assumed. Reading the paragraph explains what is actually happening.
Personally I would use the term 'Erase' rather than 'Format.'
This reminds me of the old days of floppy disks where you could format a disk then initialize a filesystem. Most people assumed that they were the one thing. Erasing the disk first and then creating the filesystem are two seperate steps.
Nowadays you don't need to low level format IDE disks.
Being a unix person I would erase a disk using DD
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/diskX
of course you still have to eject the disk before doing this.
you could also use /dev/random as the source device, to make the data even more confusing but I have found that /dev/random only produces 6 meg per second.
Gotta love unix as there is always more than one way to do it!!!
From man diskutil:
reformat device
Reformat an existing device in the same name and format.
I think this makes it obvious what reformat means. It precisely means the opposite of what some people were claiming (format a disk in a different format). By deduction, 'Format an (NTFS, HFS, UFS,..) disk' simply means the disk is being formatted, it does not specify in which format it is going to be formatted. If that information is important simply use the short and very convenient word 'as', as in 'format [a disk] as NTSF'.
reformat device
Reformat an existing device in the same name and format.
I think this makes it obvious what reformat means. It precisely means the opposite of what some people were claiming (format a disk in a different format). By deduction, 'Format an (NTFS, HFS, UFS,..) disk' simply means the disk is being formatted, it does not specify in which format it is going to be formatted. If that information is important simply use the short and very convenient word 'as', as in 'format [a disk] as NTSF'.
When I use OS X to clear a disk device, I use Disk Utility's Erase command (on the entire disk or volume), single partition setup, and the format option of writing zeroes. I never used the 8-times random write, since I assumed that would take longer (than zeroes). How much of a security risk is associated with just writing zeroes?
Also, I myself get thrown off by the terminology at times. On a disk device, using OS X's Disk Utility you can 'erase' one selected partition (slice) at a time. Or, you can select the entire device, optionally modify the partition map, and recreate/erase all of its slices. I'm pretty sure that Disk Utility won't let you do anything to (i.e. modify or repair) any filesystem on the same disk device that booted the currently running system, even if you want to touch a different one (i.e. I booted slice 10, but I want to erase slice 12).
The confusing thing (for me) here is that what OS X calls a 'volume' is one partition of the disk device, i.e. a slice. I don't know whether they mean that a 'volume' is the same as a 'filesystem', but the way I see it is that the storage device (disk) can contain volumes, and each volume can contain a filesystem. OS X doesn't talk about filesystems per se (keeping the language simpler); Larry.
Also, I myself get thrown off by the terminology at times. On a disk device, using OS X's Disk Utility you can 'erase' one selected partition (slice) at a time. Or, you can select the entire device, optionally modify the partition map, and recreate/erase all of its slices. I'm pretty sure that Disk Utility won't let you do anything to (i.e. modify or repair) any filesystem on the same disk device that booted the currently running system, even if you want to touch a different one (i.e. I booted slice 10, but I want to erase slice 12).
The confusing thing (for me) here is that what OS X calls a 'volume' is one partition of the disk device, i.e. a slice. I don't know whether they mean that a 'volume' is the same as a 'filesystem', but the way I see it is that the storage device (disk) can contain volumes, and each volume can contain a filesystem. OS X doesn't talk about filesystems per se (keeping the language simpler); Larry.
If you format by writing zeroes to the disk, an expensive (tens of thousands of dollars) data recovery company could get most of the data back. If you format with the 'write eight times' option, a data recovery company won't be able to get any of it back, and it's unlikely that even the CIA would be able to do anything with it.
If you format by deleting the directory information (a Windows-style quick format), someone with a $50 piece of software could get the contents back.
If you format by deleting the directory information (a Windows-style quick format), someone with a $50 piece of software could get the contents back.
Though there may be different terminology with *nix-based systems, the terms 'volume' and 'partition' have, on the Mac, from what I've seen since 1984, been two interchangeable terms for the same thing--all formatters for the Mac have used these terms to mean the same thing. I don't know the answer to the question as to whether volumes/partitions can also be called 'filesystems', or if that's a term that applies to some other characteristic of the whole disk mechanism itself.
Disk Utility WILL let you erase, repair, etc. https://incomeenergy271.weebly.com/git-for-mac-os-x-1075.html. secondary volumes/partitions that are on the same disk drive as the Mac is currently booted from (meaning, not the volume the Mac is currently booted from, naturally), but Disk Utility won't give you the options to 'zero all data' or the '8-way random write format' on any individual volume, whether that volume resides on the currently booted disk drive or on another disk drive--these two options are available only when you select the entire disk drive. Disk Utility also won't let you remove or resize existing individual volumes on any disk drive, except by erasing the whole drive.
Disk Utility WILL let you erase, repair, etc. https://incomeenergy271.weebly.com/git-for-mac-os-x-1075.html. secondary volumes/partitions that are on the same disk drive as the Mac is currently booted from (meaning, not the volume the Mac is currently booted from, naturally), but Disk Utility won't give you the options to 'zero all data' or the '8-way random write format' on any individual volume, whether that volume resides on the currently booted disk drive or on another disk drive--these two options are available only when you select the entire disk drive. Disk Utility also won't let you remove or resize existing individual volumes on any disk drive, except by erasing the whole drive.
File systems and partitions are not the same thing. A partition is a block of space on a disk. A file system is a way of organising the data in a partition.
Right .. the area within a particular partition (slice) may contain a filesystem, or may not. Also, there may be a logical volume in that partition, or not. In Mac OS, Disk Utility is employed to create HFS or HFS+ volumes, so there you have the 'filesystem' (the 'FS' in HFS).
In another case, in Unix when we use a disk device simply for paging (i.e. a 'swap device'), since it's the entire disk then you don't need any partition map or label. But under LVM, we need to 'initialize' (partition etc.) each disk device.
In another case, in Unix when we use a disk device simply for paging (i.e. a 'swap device'), since it's the entire disk then you don't need any partition map or label. But under LVM, we need to 'initialize' (partition etc.) each disk device.
Section 2
http://www.usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/sec96/full_papers/gutmann/
http://www.usenix.org/publications/library/proceedings/sec96/full_papers/gutmann/
(Adding to the silliness, pedantishness, and general nitpickery here :^) The proper title to this hint should be 'Format an NTFS hard drive in 10.3.'
Thank you.
Thank you.
I've never been sure of this one.
When using an acronym in writing should you use the first letter of the acronym, or the first sound of the acronym in spoken form?
Dr cleaner for os x 10.7.5. In some cases, this could be a problem if the acronym doesn't have a standard pronunciation. For example, if talking about a SQL database, some people would pronounce each letter and say it as 'Ess Kyuu El' while others would say 'Sequel'.
I knew NTFS is an acronym for something, but I didn't know what (though I just Googled it: New Technology File System).
Anyhoo, I'm not sure if there is a hard and fast rule for this kind of thing, but I admit I prefer 'an' in this situtation, and failed to do it only because I was so excited to be posting my first ever hint here that I was just overwhelmed with emotion.
When using an acronym in writing should you use the first letter of the acronym, or the first sound of the acronym in spoken form?
Dr cleaner for os x 10.7.5. In some cases, this could be a problem if the acronym doesn't have a standard pronunciation. For example, if talking about a SQL database, some people would pronounce each letter and say it as 'Ess Kyuu El' while others would say 'Sequel'.
I knew NTFS is an acronym for something, but I didn't know what (though I just Googled it: New Technology File System).
Anyhoo, I'm not sure if there is a hard and fast rule for this kind of thing, but I admit I prefer 'an' in this situtation, and failed to do it only because I was so excited to be posting my first ever hint here that I was just overwhelmed with emotion.
'An' is the correct article. The key point is that the article ('a' or 'an') is determined by the leading sound, not by the leading character.
In this case, NTFS is pronounced by speaking its letters. It starts with the lettern 'N' which is pronounced 'en,' which begins with a vowel sound, so it takes the article 'an.' Some letters in the alphabet have names that begin with vowel sounds, others with consonant sounds, so care must be taken to think about how the acronym is pronounced.
Some examples: 'an NTFS volume,' 'a U.S. court,' 'an IRS document,' 'a PBS special.' If you are a native speaker of English, those should all sound normal to you.
Some acronyms are pronounced like words (GIF, for example, which is pronounced 'jiff' .. or some people say 'giff' .. both pronunciations require the article 'a'). https://incomeenergy271.weebly.com/free-download-whatsapp-messenger-for-mac-os-x.html. Again, a writer simply needs to think about how the acronym is spoken.
In this case, NTFS is pronounced by speaking its letters. It starts with the lettern 'N' which is pronounced 'en,' which begins with a vowel sound, so it takes the article 'an.' Some letters in the alphabet have names that begin with vowel sounds, others with consonant sounds, so care must be taken to think about how the acronym is pronounced.
Some examples: 'an NTFS volume,' 'a U.S. court,' 'an IRS document,' 'a PBS special.' If you are a native speaker of English, those should all sound normal to you.
Some acronyms are pronounced like words (GIF, for example, which is pronounced 'jiff' .. or some people say 'giff' .. both pronunciations require the article 'a'). https://incomeenergy271.weebly.com/free-download-whatsapp-messenger-for-mac-os-x.html. Again, a writer simply needs to think about how the acronym is spoken.
Windows' default NTFS is read-only on OS X, not read-and-write, and Windows computers can't even read Mac-formatted HFS+ drives. FAT32 works for both OSes, but has a 4GB size limit per file, so it isn't ideal. The exFAT file system is a much simpler option.
A.How do I format my external hard drive to exFAT on Mac?
- Open disk Utility on your Mac.
- Select the drive you wish to format.
- Select the “Erase” tab in Disk Utility.
- Select MS-DOS (FAT) from the drop down box.
- Click Erase and follow the prompts.
- Let it finish, and you're done.
Is NTFS format compatible with Mac?
NTFS. The native Windows file system is NTFS, which is only partially compatible with Mac OS X. Macs can read files on NTFS drives, but it cannot write to them. So if you need to get files from a PC to your Mac, NTFS is a decent option.How do you reformat a WD external hard drive for Mac?
Connect it, power it up, go to Disk Utility (in Applications/Utilities), select the WD disk on the left, go to the Erase tab, and choose 'Mac OS Extended'. Click Erase. That should do it.How do I format a Seagate external hard drive for Mac?
- Connect the drive to your Mac.
- Open Applications > Utilities > Disk Utility.
- On the left hand side of Disk Utility you'll see a list of drives.
- Select the Erase tab and choose Mac OS Extended (Journaled) for the format and give it a name.
- Press the Erase button to kick off the process.
Which is better ntfs or fat32?
If you need the drive for a Windows-only environment, NTFS is the best choice. If you need to exchange files (even occasionally) with a non-Windows system like a Mac or Linux box, then FAT32 will give you less agita, as long as your file sizes are smaller than 4GB.
What is the maximum file size for NTFS?
For example, using 64 KB clusters, the maximum size Windows XP NTFS volume is 256 TB minus 64 KB. Using the default cluster size of 4 KB, the maximum NTFS volume size is 16 TB minus 4 KB. Both of these are vastly higher than the 128 GB limit in Windows XP SP1.Which format to use for USB drive?
The overwhelming majority of USB flash drives you buy are going to come in one of two formats: FAT32 or NTFS. The first format, FAT32, is fully compatible with Mac OS X, though with some drawbacks that we'll discuss later.What type of file system is used in Windows 10?
Windows 10 uses the default file system NTFS, as does Windows 8 and 8.1. Although a complete change to the new ReFS file system was rumored by professionals in recent months, the last technical build released by Microsoft resulted in no dramatic changes and Windows 10 continuing to use NTFS as the standard file system.
Can Android read Exfat file system?
Like SD cards, USB flash drives can be formatted as either (but not limited to) FAT32 or as exFAT. As I mentioned earlier, Windows won't format large USB drives as FAT32, you need to pick exFAT, rather than NTFS, if you want to have any chance of the drive working with Android.
2.Can you use my passport on Mac and PC?
Western Digital manufactures the Passport line of portable external hard drives. If you originally used a Passport drive with an Apple computer, you most likely formatted it in the Mac OS Extended format, which is not compatible with the Windows operating system. Connect the WD Passport's USB cable to your PC.
3.Which format to erase disk in Mac?
Select your startup drive on the left (typically Macintosh HD), switch to the Erase tab and choose Mac OS Extended (Journaled) from the Format drop-down menu. Select Erase and then confirm your choice. Quit out of the Disk Utility app, and this time choose Reinstall OS X and Continue.
4.How do I format an external drive on a Mac?
Launch Disk Utility, located in Applications > Utilities. Locate the drive name from the left hand side of Disk Utility and click on it. Click on the “Erase” tab across the top. Next to “Format:” click the contextual menu and select “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)”
5.What is formatting a hard drive do?
Disk formatting is the process of preparing a data storage device such as a hard disk drive, solid-state drive, floppy disk or USB flash drive for initial use. In some cases, the formatting operation may also create one or more new file systems.
6.What type of file system does Linux use?
Linux. Linux supports numerous file systems, but common choices for the system disk on a block device include the ext* family (ext2, ext3 and ext4), XFS, JFS, ReiserFS and btrfs.
7.Can Mac use Exfat?
Instead of reformatting it all the time, just use the much more platform-independent exFAT and never format it again. Windows' default NTFS is read-only on OS X, not read-and-write, and Windows computers can't even read Mac-formatted HFS+ drives. The exFAT file system is a much simpler option.
8.Is fat32 and Exfat the same thing?
FAT32 is an older file system that's largely relegated to USB flash drives and other external drives. Windows uses NTFS for its system drive, and it's also ideal for other internal drives. exFAT is a modern replacement for FAT32, and more devices support it than do NTFS — although it's not as widespread as FAT32.
9.How do I format my external hard drive to Exfat on Mac?
- Open disk Utility on your Mac.
- Select the drive you wish to format.
- Select the “Erase” tab in Disk Utility.
- Select MS-DOS (FAT) from the drop down box.
- Click Erase and follow the prompts.
- Let it finish, and you're done.
Is NTFS or fat32 better?
If you need the drive for a Windows-only environment, NTFS is the best choice. If you need to exchange files (even occasionally) with a non-Windows system like a Mac or Linux box, then FAT32 will give you less agita, as long as your file sizes are smaller than 4GB.
![Ntfs for mac os free Ntfs for mac os free](/uploads/1/2/6/5/126581519/331326554.png)
What does Exfat mean on Mac?
Mac OS X 10.6.5 and later. Some Android OS devices such as the Sony Xperia Z (running the latest firmware) exFAT (Extended File Allocation Table) is a Microsoft file system introduced in 2006 optimized for flash memory such as USB flash drives and SD cards.
12.What type of file system is used in Windows 10?
Windows 10 uses the default file system NTFS, as does Windows 8 and 8.1. Although a complete change to the new ReFS file system was rumored by professionals in recent months, the last technical build released by Microsoft resulted in no dramatic changes and Windows 10 continuing to use NTFS as the standard file system.
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13.What is Exfat and fat32?
FAT32 vs. NTFS vs. exFAT – Difference Between Three File Systems. For removable flash drives and other forms of USB interface-based storage, we use FAT32. Additionally, the removable flash drives and memory cards can also be formatted with the exFAT file system, which is a derivative of the old FAT32 filesystem.
14.Can Exfat handle large files?
Files larger than 4GB can NOT be stored on a FAT32 volume. Formatting the flash drive as exFAT or NTFS will resolve this issue. WARNING: Backup your data. Formatting will delete all the data in your device.
15.What is the best allocation unit size for Exfat?
If you are a “Standard User” by Microsoft's definition, you should keep the default 4096 bytes. Basically, the allocation unit size is the block size on your hard drive when it formats NTFS. If you have lots of small files, then it's a good idea to keep the allocation size small so your harddrive space won't be wasted.
16.Can you read NTFS on Linux?
Yes, Ubuntu can read your ntfs partition fine, it doesn't work the other way though, Windows won't even see your linux partitions unless you install third party software into windows.
17.Can the ps4 read Exfat?
exFAT vs FAT32 for PS4. Whether you're formatting an internal drive, external drive, USB flash drive, or SD card, Windows will give you the choice of NTFS, FAT32, and exFAT. But PS4 only supports two of these file systems—FAT32 and exFAT.
18.What is the difference between MS DOS FAT and Exfat?
If you absolutely, positively will only be working with Macs and no other system, ever: Use Mac OS Extended (Journaled). If you need to transfer files larger than 4 GB between Macs and PCs: Use exFAT. In all other cases: Use MS-DOS (FAT), aka FAT32.
19.What is the maximum file size for NTFS?
For example, using 64 KB clusters, the maximum size Windows XP NTFS volume is 256 TB minus 64 KB. Using the default cluster size of 4 KB, the maximum NTFS volume size is 16 TB minus 4 KB. Both of these are vastly higher than the 128 GB limit in Windows XP SP1.
20.What is HFS+ format in Mac?
The Mac OS Extended Volume Hard Drive Format, otherwise known as HFS+, is the file system found on Mac OS 8.1 and later, including Mac OS X. It is an upgrade from the original Mac OS Standard Format known as HFS (HFS Standard), or Hierarchical File System, supported by Mac OS 8.0 and earlier.
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Updated: 6th December 2019