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Apple Computing Products:
Running Windows on your Mac
dual boot in MacBook(four partitions)
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<blockquote data-quote="Andromeda" data-source="post: 1114247" data-attributes="member: 172986"><p><strong>milmend and</strong></p><p></p><p>thanks for your help even though it does not work out. </p><p>I've just switched from Win to Mac. I always separate data from programs. First , it makes things more organized(at least I feel so), secondly, I hope that my data can still survive even though my system crashes. I think it's a good habit and I am surprised that Mac doesn't allow that. I really don't see any reasons why not to do that if we don't need to worry about the space. </p><p> </p><p>How can we use driver to share data between win and mac? right now, I only have two partitions, one for mac, the other for win 7. They can see other other but cannot write on it. External drive is not always handy.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Andromeda, post: 1114247, member: 172986"] [b]milmend and[/b] thanks for your help even though it does not work out. I've just switched from Win to Mac. I always separate data from programs. First , it makes things more organized(at least I feel so), secondly, I hope that my data can still survive even though my system crashes. I think it's a good habit and I am surprised that Mac doesn't allow that. I really don't see any reasons why not to do that if we don't need to worry about the space. How can we use driver to share data between win and mac? right now, I only have two partitions, one for mac, the other for win 7. They can see other other but cannot write on it. External drive is not always handy. [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
Running Windows on your Mac
dual boot in MacBook(four partitions)
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