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ttkuiper

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Nov 26, 2012
1
0
Hi to all!

New to this forum, but had some great help from here in the past.

My problem is:

I have a external HDD connected to my airpot extreme. Originally formatted to Fat32 because i stored PS3 games on it.

Now i mainly use it for movies to stream to my apple tv.

Now i want to stream HD and Bluray movies to it. So files bigger than 4GB.

In wich format can format it? As i keep reading that exfat and NTFS is not supported by the airport extreme.

Hope to hear from you guys soon!
 

GGJstudios

macrumors Westmere
May 16, 2008
44,545
943
Hi to all!

New to this forum, but had some great help from here in the past.

My problem is:

I have a external HDD connected to my airpot extreme. Originally formatted to Fat32 because i stored PS3 games on it.

Now i mainly use it for movies to stream to my apple tv.

Now i want to stream HD and Bluray movies to it. So files bigger than 4GB.

In wich format can format it? As i keep reading that exfat and NTFS is not supported by the airport extreme.

Hope to hear from you guys soon!
If you're only using it with Macs, use HFS+.

Format A Hard Drive Using Disk Utility (which is in your /Applications/Utilities folder)

Choose the appropriate format:

HFS+ (Hierarchical File System, a.k.a. Mac OS Extended (Journaled) Don't use case-sensitive)

NTFS (Windows NT File System)
  • Read/Write NTFS from native Windows.
  • Read only NTFS from native Mac OS X
    [*]To Read/Write/Format NTFS from Mac OS X, here are some alternatives:
    • For Mac OS X 10.4 or later (32 or 64-bit), install Paragon ($19.95) (Best Choice for Lion and Mountain Lion)
    • For Mac OS X 10.5 and later, including Lion, FUSE for OS X
    • For 32-bit Mac OS X, install NTFS-3G for Mac OS X (free) (does not work in 64-bit mode)
    • For 64-bit Snow Leopard, read this: MacFUSE for 64-bit Snow Leopard
    • Some have reported problems using Tuxera (approx $36), which is an enhanced version of NTFS-3G with faster performance.
    • Native NTFS support can be enabled in Snow Leopard and later versions, but is not advisable, due to instability.
  • AirPort Extreme (802.11n) and Time Capsule do not support NTFS
  • Maximum file size: 16 TB
  • Maximum volume size: 256TB
  • You can use this format if you routinely share a drive with multiple Windows systems.

exFAT (FAT64)
  • Supported in Mac OS X only in 10.6.5 or later.
  • Not all Windows versions support exFAT. See disadvantages.
  • exFAT (Extended File Allocation Table)
  • AirPort Extreme (802.11n) and Time Capsule do not support exFAT
  • Maximum file size: 16 EiB
  • Maximum volume size: 64 ZiB
  • You can use this format if it is supported by all computers with which you intend to share the drive. See "disadvantages" for details.

FAT32 (File Allocation Table)
  • Read/Write FAT32 from both native Windows and native Mac OS X.
    [*]Maximum file size: 4GB.
  • Maximum volume size: 2TB
  • You can use this format if you share the drive between Mac OS X and Windows computers and have no files larger than 4GB.
 
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