

If the drive is in FAT32 it will not work. For Mac you need a FAT32 drive to backup to.įor the Windows side, In order to backup to a drive, the drive needs to be in NTFS format. The problem is is that your backup software cannot use the NTFS read/write software to do the backup. Windows can only backup on NTFS drives, while mac can only backup on FAT32 drives.įor the Mac side, yes, you can download third party software so that it can read and write to NTFS drives but most likely you are using backup software such as Time Machine to do this. Yes, Mac and Windows can both read and write to both NTFS and FAT32 but for the mac you need third party software to do that. You said that you wanted to to use an external drive to use for BACKUP.

Well.A lot of these people did not fully read your question. Also, there is a command that you can run in terminal that lets you see NTFS drives in Time machine, but once you run Time Machine it fails. Yes, I have tried that same ntfs mounter. User interface is very similar to AirPort : simply click on the icon to display a menu with NTFS volumes name and select the volume you want to write on. I do not even remember how I did that one or where it came from.īecause this implies terminal commands, there is a program that can do by GUI interface, NTFS Mounter simply uses this ability, and provides a simple user interface to the mount command for NTFS volumes.

The catalogue has been separated from the Retrospect BU and I spent 6 hours on-line trying to find how to get those restored (to no avail), the Ghost one wants to completely overwrite whatever drive I use to restore it, and the only one that worked perfectly was the one that was zipped. I have been cleaning up an old WD HD and it had 3 such back-ups, one made by the sw I got with the drive (Retrospect Express 6.5), one from Ghost and one that was merely zipped files. My experience has also been that restoring these back-ups (sometimes called tapes) is a big pain and doesn't always work. I think it usually also means that a catalogue with libraries of sorts is saved, not merely copies of the files that are the same as what you have on your computer. That is not quite the same as "backing-up", which in my experience, means that the computer uses some kind of software to periodically back-up and supplement your files to the EHD.
