The views expressed above may not match yours - But that's the reason my Dad went to war - wasn't it?
Life's journey is not to arrive at the grave safely in a well preserved body, .... but rather to skid in sideways, totally worn out,... shouting "man, what a ride"!!!
Im sure you will find that macs can't write to NTFS
Its the same for linux you can read NTFS but they can't write back to it properly altough there are some apps that can do it you cant do it natively and its pretty easy to corrupt your data...
It is not a secutity/permissions problem
Don't touch it with a broom unless ur only using windows xp/2000
ohhhhh ... forgot to ask ... what OS level of Mac are you running ??? ... LOL
Heres the bottom line ... if your running the latest V of Mac OS .. you should be able to write back to an NTFS drive .. seeing as how you are using a Uni mac .. the odds of it being the latest os are slim to none ... if thats the case .. your only option is to create 32Gb partitions on your disk .. Mac OS can write to NTFS but only in the last 6 months or so.
Based on NTFS write support being still pretty sketchy in Linux, let alone Mac, which (rightly so) will not release something without it being rock solid.
OR you can just fucking google it
I made the 31.5GB partition. Took it to school to format on a Mac cause I couldn't format at home for some reason. But then the Mac at school could only format to FAT16 not 32.. Since I didn't know how to make the partition smaller from 32 to 16 GB, I picked the other File system option which was MS Dos instead of MS Dos FAT16. So format was successfull. I wrote data and it read it in my computer in the 32GB partition!
W00T!
Cheers all for the help!![]()
There are 3rd party utilities that format big HDs to fat32. I used one of them (freeware) to format a 100Gb HD for my digital wallet. Try Googling. If it won't help, let me know, I'll check when I get home. I may still have it somewhere.
"People are stupid ... almost anyone will believe almost anything. Because people are stupid, they will believe a lie because they want to believe it's true, or because they are afraid it might be true. People's heads are full of knowledge, facts, and beliefs, and most of it is false, yet they think it all true ... they can only rarely tell the difference between a lie and the truth, and yet they are confident they can, and so all are easier to fool." -- Wizard's First Rule
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