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LaCie USB 3.0 Drive is preformatted exFAT for compatibility with both Mac and Windows computers. If you use the drive with only one type of computer, you can optimize file copy performance by formatting the drive in the native file system for your operating system—NTFS for Windows or HFS+ for Macs. There are two ways you can optimize performance:
Toolkit Optimize | Format your drive for optimal performance with just a few simple clicks. |
Manual formatting | Use Disk Management (Windows) or Disk Utility (Mac) to format your drive in non-native formats. |
NTFS—The native file system for Windows. macOS can read NTFS volumes but cannot natively write to them.
Mac OS Extended (HFS+)—The native hard drive file system for macOS. Windows cannot natively read or write to HFS+ (journaled) volumes. This is the best format if you intend to use LaCie USB 3.0 Drive with Time Machine.
APFS (Apple File System)—An Apple file system optimized for solid state drives (SSDs) and flash-based storage systems. While you can format your hard disk drive (HDD) in APFS, performance may be degraded when files on the drive are routinely subjected to extensive editing (for example, large-scale image, video, audio, and music editing). Note the following restrictions:
exFAT—Compatible with Mac and Windows. exFAT is not a journaled file system which means it can be more susceptible to data corruption when errors occur or the drive is not disconnected properly from the computer.
FAT32—Compatible with Mac and Windows. However, FAT32 is a legacy file system designed for low capacity hard drives and it is not recommended for modern hard drives or operating systems. A FAT32 partition can reach up to 32GB when formatted on a Windows PC.
Use NTFS if: |
…you connect the storage device to Windows computers, and you don’t need to allow a Mac to write to the disk. |
Use HFS+ if: |
…you connect the storage device to Mac computers, and you don’t need to allow a Windows computer to read or write to the disk. HFS+ is the only format compatible with Time Machine. |
Use APFS if: |
…you have an SSD drive you connect to Mac computers only. |
Use exFAT if: |
…you need to allow both Mac and Windows computers to read and write to the disk. |
You can use FAT32 if: |
…you connect the storage device to older Windows and Mac computers. FAT32 is not recommended for modern operating systems and computers. |
Toolkit provides a quick and simple means of initially optimizing the drive for best performance.
Learn more |
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Use the steps below to manually format and partition a storage device.
macOS starting version 10.13—Make sure to select the disk and not just the volume. If you don’t see two entries listed in the sidebar, change the view in disk utility to show both the drive and the volume. The view button is in the upper left side of the Disk Utility window. Change the view to Show All Devices. This feature was introduced in macOS 10.13 and is not available in 10.11 or 10.12. |