For Mac he can use fuse for mac or NTFS-3G for Mac, that will give you the ability to write to ntfs drives on a Mac.
http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/23729/macfuse
I use NTFS-3G for Mac and it works fine.
http://sourceforge.net/projects/fuse-for-macosx/
On Sun, Mar 13, 2011 at 12:16 PM, Kenneth Porter shiva@sewingwitch.comwrote:
--On Wednesday, March 09, 2011 2:56 PM -0800 Todd Cary todd@aristesoftware.com wrote:
I have some photographs on my Centos 4 server that I want to copy to a USB drive. However, I want to be able to access the files from Windows or Mac OS's. Where should I look for instructions on how to mount and format the USB drive and is FAT32 the only option?
I don't know about Mac, but you could set up NTFS with Fuse on CentOS to allow you to format and mount it as an NTFS filesystem.
You could also format as ext3 and install a filesystem driver on Windows to understand ext3.
Since the Mac is BSD-based, it might even understand ext3. There's this project:
http://ext2fsx.sourceforge.net/
I haven't used these, as I haven't needed to export files to another OS this way. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos