![]() I know you prefer to just have it mailed to her, but testing it on your Mac might allow you to smooth the path for your Mom. You could eliminate that issue if you were to go ahead and format the drive as Mac OS Extended (Journaled) on your system before sending it on to Mom. The big issue is that you need to let your Mom know that is to be expected, since it may offer up the reminder that this will erase the drive (and that seems scary). Time Machine should offer, if the drive is formatted in one of those two formats, offer to reformat it for use with Time Machine. NTFS is more problematical, as the Mac will read it but won't (without add on software) write to the drive. It's prime benefit is that both Mac and Windows machine can read and write to the drive. The Mac can read and write FAT32, though it's not optimal and the format doesn't accept files > 4 GB. If it's not marketed specifically for Macs, it will come formatted either FAT32 or NTFS. ![]() ![]() If you want good, reliable storage of terabytes of data, WD's Elements line is worth considering. However you will need to worry about the format of the drive. Available in 250GB, 500GB, and 1 and 2TB sizes. I've used Seagate and Western Digital externals, as well as some from OWC. But if you bypass those you should be fine. I've had no real problems with different externals, though there are reports of issues with recent Toshiba externals.
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