Modifying My Passport For Mac Docs

Modifying My Passport For Mac Docs 3,0/5 8875 reviews

So I’ve recently made the transfer from a Mac, back to a PC. Before making the move I saved all the files from my Mac onto My Passport. Now that my Windows laptop is up and running I’d like to transfer my files from My Passport to it. This includes my CV, scanned documents, around 30gb worth of music, and hundreds of baby photos of my son. The drive doesn’t show up at all on my laptop. Advice I’ve seen involves reformatting the drive, but obviously I’d rather not do that as I understand it’d involved erasing all of the data on it.

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Is there a way to transfer the files on to my laptop without formatting it? Obviously once the files have transferred and saved onto my laptop I’ll gladly reformat it to Windows. Am not very good at this as I’ve just come to Windows 8. Any ‘‘noob’’ help I will be EXTREMELY grateful for! Windows by default cannot read Mac-formatted hard discs, hence the suggestions about reformatting them before use to a common format that both can read (FAT or FAT32 usually). But as you say, in your case it isn’t quite what you want as it will lose the data involved.

There are some software options that you can install on your Windows machine which may allow the HDD to be accessed. One of the most common is, which I think has a free version that will allow read-only access. Another is which has a free 5-day trial option.

Passport

HI all, Ive had a My passport (Windows) for some time, I recently bought a MAC now I need a Passport thats compatitible and it will cost the same to backup and reformat my current one as buying a new one. My Passport for Mac portable storage works straight out of the box with Mac devices which makes it easy to get going quickly – drag and drop files to and from, or setup a backup routine with Apple’s Time Machine software to help protect your photos, videos, music and documents.

Either of these may or may not work for you, but it’s something that you could try to at least allow you to pull your files from your drive so you can then reformat it either to FAT32 (if you need dual Windows/Mac access - note this has a 4GB individual file size limitation) or NTFS (if you now only need Windows full access - Mac’s can read/copy from NTFS, but not write to it iirc). Please note that I haven’t tried either of them (and have no affiliation with either) as I don’t have a Mac, but it may be helpful for you or at least something to try. Powered by, best viewed with JavaScript enabled.