Use x-fat.
Everything except a device like a Victor Reader will be able to read
and write to it.
At 07:09 AM 7/9/2014, you wrote:
I'm seeing the following options.
MS Dos FAT
EX Fat
Which option should I choose?
I'm not seeing FAT32 just the ones I've described above.
On 8 Jul 2014, at 2
The rule is that a disk less than or equal to 32 GB should be formatted as
FAT32, whereas disks larger than 32 GB should be formatted as ExFAT.
Exception: for interoperability with Linux, always use FAT32. This works
because the overhead required for maintaining the directories and FAT is abou
Ok, I'll go with MS DOS then.
Thank you all for your contributions in helping me to find the right file
format between Mac and Windows for flash drives.
Its really appreciated!
Daniel
On 9 Jul 2014, at 14:32, Jimmy Podsim wrote:
> According to apple, msdos fat is the one you want.
> I have us
According to apple, msdos fat is the one you want.
I have used XFat before as well, but as long as your not using files over 4 or
4.5 gig I think it is, MSDosFat works on all devices.
God bless our troops and God bless America again.
Jimmy Podsim.
http://www.facebook.com/jimmy.podsim/
Yahoo mess
I'm seeing the following options.
MS Dos FAT
EX Fat
Which option should I choose?
I'm not seeing FAT32 just the ones I've described above.
On 8 Jul 2014, at 22:31, matthew dyer vinux laptop
wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> What about fat or fat 32? Both should work fine.
> tthew
>
>
> Ma
> On 07/0
Hi,
What about fat or fat 32? Both should work fine.
tthew
Ma
On 07/07/2014 07:03 PM, Daniel McGee wrote:Hey all, maybe a simple
question but it isn't for me. So your advice would be welcome.
Basically, I have a flash drive sitting here that I'm thinking of using
with somebody to act as th
Go with fat32, it will work on both without problems.
On Jul 7, 2014, at 6:03 PM, Daniel McGee wrote:
> Hey all, maybe a simple question but it isn't for me. So your advice would be
> welcome.
>
> Basically, I have a flash drive sitting here that I'm thinking of using with
> somebody to act as
Hi,
NTFS is readable by OS X but not writeable without diving into the Terminal or
using some third party utilities. In Disk Utility, your choices for making
drives accessible by both Windows and Mac are FAT32 and XFAT. FAT32 should do
the trick for a Flash drive. If it was an external HD, X
NTFS you cannot write to, only read from on OS X. Not unless you get software
that'll allow you to somehow perform both actions.
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NTFS would be the best and most secure however I know OS X can read
it and I am pretty sure it can write to it as well.
If not, go with x-fat aka fat64.
At 07:03 PM 7/7/2014, Daniel McGee wrote:
Hey all, maybe a simple question but it isn't for me. So your advice
would be welcome.
Basically,
Hey all, maybe a simple question but it isn't for me. So your advice would be
welcome.
Basically, I have a flash drive sitting here that I'm thinking of using with
somebody to act as the go between for transferring music files. The problem is
that he uses Windows. XP I believe and I'm using a M
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