Approve the Cookies
This website uses cookies to improve your user experience. By using this site, you agree to our use of cookies and our Privacy Policy.
OK
Forums  •   • New posts  •   • RTAT  •   • 'Best of'  •   • Gallery  •   • Gear
Guest
Forums  •   • New posts  •   • RTAT  •   • 'Best of'  •   • Gallery  •   • Gear
Register to forums    Log in

 
FORUMS General Gear Talk Computers 
Thread started 16 Sep 2009 (Wednesday) 11:41
Search threadPrev/next
sponsored links (only for non-logged)

Moving from PC to Mac - Existing external data drives

 
drandy1
Member
89 posts
Joined Nov 2003
Location: Chicago, IL
     
Sep 16, 2009 11:41 |  #1

I am considering moving to an iMac from my Dell PC. I think I am comfortable regarding switching platforms for my Adobe programs (Photoshop and Lightroom) but my concerns/questions relate to my data storage. I currently have an NAS drive holding all my photos and music media. It is formatted as NTFS. I then have a separate 1Tb hard drive also formatted as NTFS which serves as a back up to the NAS drive. If I were to switch platforms I believe that I can only read from the NTFS drives. What would be the recommendations for enabling me to switch platforms while retaining reliable read/write access for my data? Or should I purchase a new EHD and format for Mac and then transfer the data? Then I could reformat my original two drives and share the data back again? Seems long winded? I may only have the Mac available to accomplish this task as my PC is not even booting up these days! A whole separate story.

Thanks for any advice from cross-platformers...




  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
MaxxuM
Goldmember
Avatar
3,361 posts
Gallery: 3 photos
Likes: 22
Joined May 2007
Location: Rio Grande Valley
     
Sep 16, 2009 11:51 |  #2

Yes, OS X can only read from NTFS drives (with a patch). There are several options you can consider, but the main one would be to get a large external firewire drive to serve as a Time Machine. Number two, how much data are we talking about? If there is only 100 or so gigs you could just copy it to another drive, reformat the NAS to a format that is read/writeable by OS X (FreeNAS is a good place to start) and then copy all the stuff back, reconfirm it, then do the same with the backup drive. Also, some NAS setups allow for FTP/Samba setup which is Mac compatible.

I'm sure you'll really enjoy going Mac - it's very liberating :)




  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
drandy1
THREAD ­ STARTER
Member
89 posts
Joined Nov 2003
Location: Chicago, IL
     
Sep 16, 2009 12:04 as a reply to  @ MaxxuM's post |  #3

Thanks. We are talking about 150GB in total right now. I will look into both the options that you suggest.




  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
ocabj
Goldmember
Avatar
1,120 posts
Likes: 3
Joined Jan 2008
Location: Riverside, CA (USA)
     
Sep 16, 2009 15:30 |  #4

You can read/write to NTFS volumes using MacFuse + 3G-NTFS:

http://www.ntfs-3g.org/ (external link)

The I/O isn't all that great though, at least, that's what I found with earlier versions. I haven't used 3G-NTFS for a couple years now. Perhaps I/O performance is better in the latest version.


Jonathan Ocab - https://www.ocabj.net (external link) - http://jocabphoto.com (external link)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
Moppie
Moderator
Avatar
15,101 posts
Gallery: 22 photos
Best ofs: 1
Likes: 448
Joined Sep 2004
Location: Akarana, Aotearoa. (Kiwiland)
     
Sep 16, 2009 19:29 |  #5

MaxxuM wrote in post #8655596 (external link)
Yes, OS X can only read from NTFS drives (with a patch). There are several options you can consider, but the main one would be to get a large external firewire drive to serve as a Time Machine. Number two, how much data are we talking about? If there is only 100 or so gigs you could just copy it to another drive, reformat the NAS to a format that is read/writeable by OS X (FreeNAS is a good place to start) and then copy all the stuff back, reconfirm it, then do the same with the backup drive. Also, some NAS setups allow for FTP/Samba setup which is Mac compatible.

I'm sure you'll really enjoy going Mac - it's very liberating :)

ocabj wrote in post #8656892 (external link)
You can read/write to NTFS volumes using MacFuse + 3G-NTFS:

http://www.ntfs-3g.org/ (external link)

The I/O isn't all that great though, at least, that's what I found with earlier versions. I haven't used 3G-NTFS for a couple years now. Perhaps I/O performance is better in the latest version.


Will these solutions work with Snow Leopard?
Becuase anyone buying a new iMac now, will be getting Snow Leopard.


flickr (external link)

Have you Calibrated your Monkey lately?

Now more than ever we need to be a community, working together and for each other, as photographers, as lovers of photography and as members of POTN.

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
ocabj
Goldmember
Avatar
1,120 posts
Likes: 3
Joined Jan 2008
Location: Riverside, CA (USA)
     
Sep 16, 2009 20:25 |  #6

MacFuse actually comes with SL. At least, it was in my System Preferences menu and I never installed it manually (clean install).

I don't know if ntfs-3g works in 10.6. It worked in 10.5. If it doesn't work in 10.6, they'll release a new version that works in 10.6.


Jonathan Ocab - https://www.ocabj.net (external link) - http://jocabphoto.com (external link)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
wlescall
Senior Member
512 posts
Joined Mar 2006
Location: Northern Panhandle, WV
     
Sep 16, 2009 21:20 |  #7

Apparently you can enable NTFS support in SL.

See here (external link).

And Paragon has a beta NTFS For Mac that is supposed to be SL compatible.


Bill
EOS 5Dmkiii, Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 mkii, 580 EX II , Canon EF 24-105 mm f/4L, Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS
2 desktops & 2 laptops (PC & Mac each)
Chronon Photography (external link)

  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
MaxxuM
Goldmember
Avatar
3,361 posts
Gallery: 3 photos
Likes: 22
Joined May 2007
Location: Rio Grande Valley
     
Sep 16, 2009 21:38 |  #8

Moppie wrote in post #8658058 (external link)
Will these solutions work with Snow Leopard?
Becuase anyone buying a new iMac now, will be getting Snow Leopard.

FreeNAS is based on FreeBSD so it's a no brainer that it would be fine with Mac's on the network. If you're really geeky you can find scripts on the web to run periodically to backup whatever you want to the NAS as well as automatically map NAS drives to your desktop. In the end, if whatever you find on the net supports UNIX network wise will also be able to support OS X (sometimes requiring you to use Terminal though).




  
  LOG IN TO REPLY
sponsored links (only for non-logged)

2,482 views & 0 likes for this thread, 5 members have posted to it.
Moving from PC to Mac - Existing external data drives
FORUMS General Gear Talk Computers 
AAA
x 1600
y 1600

Jump to forum...   •  Rules   •  Forums   •  New posts   •  RTAT   •  'Best of'   •  Gallery   •  Gear   •  Reviews   •  Member list   •  Polls   •  Image rules   •  Search   •  Password reset   •  Home

Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!


COOKIES DISCLAIMER: This website uses cookies to improve your user experience. By using this site, you agree to our use of cookies and to our privacy policy.
Privacy policy and cookie usage info.


POWERED BY AMASS forum software 2.58forum software
version 2.58 /
code and design
by Pekka Saarinen ©
for photography-on-the.net

Latest registered member is vinceisvisual
968 guests, 176 members online
Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018

Photography-on-the.net Digital Photography Forums is the website for photographers and all who love great photos, camera and post processing techniques, gear talk, discussion and sharing. Professionals, hobbyists, newbies and those who don't even own a camera -- all are welcome regardless of skill, favourite brand, gear, gender or age. Registering and usage is free.