Quote:
Originally Posted by
GQgeek 
Wtf are you downloading that's 15GB? Blu-ray rips? Are people even uploading those yet? You're lucky your isp doesn't throttle you. Second question, DVDs are usually layed out with the video in many smaller files instead of one big file. So again, what are you downloading?
Anyway, why don't you convert the filesystem on your portable HD to NTFS? Then you can copy it as a single file. IF you use the portable HD mostly for big files, chose a large cluster size.
ISP limit is 200 GB a month, and yes people have been uploading HiDef movie rips for at least 1 1/2 years. Also Mac OS Journaled+ formatted laptop won't be able to write to write onto an NTFS formatted portable HD without software designed for that purpose (which is hard to find sans charge, even via torrents). For a geek, you aren't very geeky.

Quote:
Originally Posted by
GQgeek 
a quick google shows there are programs that will give you write support to NTFS volumes on a mac.
See above.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
unjung 
Split RAR or ZIP. Jesus.
I read that there are problems with RAR regarding large files, thus my apprehension using this route, but I'll give it a try. I will take your advice and pray to Jesus, but I'm Jewish, so I don't think he will help me out.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Tokyo Slim 
Mac answer:
If you don't have an HDMI connector on your Mac, you don't really need one. Just buy whatever dongle or wireless device Apple is selling to solve this problem.
Windows Answer:
Who still uses FAT32?!?!?! Jeezus.
I admitted elsewhere that some Apple products are ripoffs, and this is one of those cases you and I agree regarding a particular aspect of Apples product strategy / positioning.
Regarding Windows / Mac format sharing, FAT32 is the only HD format which allows a user to read / write in both Mac os and Windows. Which is the reason why I have a HD formatted in FAT32 exactly for that purpose. In all honesty, Apple should include a free software to enable people to easily migrate files from NFTS to Mac OS Journaled. After all, their strategy centers around converting Windows users...