(Those who use iTerm2, I bet they know how to open it :D)īefore we start on, MAKE SURE that your USB stick, external HDD, has single name to it, or better yet without spaces in name! e.g. NTfs is the favored format for modern Windows systems (including Macs running Boot camp). ![]() The other way is in your Finder Applications > Utilities > Terminal. Normally, under Mac os X, drives formatted with NTfs are read-only. Surely you guessed it, this will not go without console application in Mac this is Terminal, and some of us may us better one iTerm2, either way you’ll need to know how to open it.Įasiest way is to use Spotlight just hit Cmd + Space and write Terminal and here we go… Interesting point is that you don’t need to buy it is for free, you just need to geek a bit to make it writable. There are proprietary software like Tuxera that can enable to write to NTFS. ![]() By default Mac OS X Mavericks (same goes for older distribution) has Microsoft file system NTFS read-only. There have been different possibilites to mount Linux Ext2/Ext3 volumes in the Mac OS X Finder: Mac OS X Ext2 Filesystem - which sadly doesnt seem to work.
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