Zammy-Sam said:
The point of external drives is mostly to be independant from computers and network systems. You should be able to plug it to any comp and have access to your data without having a laptop to share the drive over the network. And I think this is guilly's intention here.
guilly, since you seem to work in a msdos environment as well, why don't you simply format the drive from that environment (plug the drive msdos/win95 box and use format drive)?
Euuuuh, ok let me give answer to all these questions.
The Macintosh Interchange format (actually it is a FAT32 format) is not Macintosh optimized. It requires slightly more time to do reads and writes to disk. The Mac OS Plus format behaves faster.
My USB 2.0/Firewire drive is mainly used for video post-processing (such as converting a DVD .VOB file to DivX using mencode, for example). Disk speed is the most needed resource (w/CPU, of course). Using a FAT32 formatted disk under OS X will result in poorer performance; it is not a huge performance decrease - possibly most users won't even notice it, but I DO care.
Hence, formating my disk in Mac OS Plus format ONLY makes this disk unreadable to Windows based computers. There's some popular software called Mac Link which will allow me to read Macintosh formated disks, but then again, an intermediate process will decrease performance. And do you want to know what I use most my external drive for in my PC? Yes, video post-processing and gaming. Two of most intensive hard-drive tasks.
Since I have 60 Gb available, I won't feel guilty to split the drive in two different chunks, with different formats, whenever they perform at their best in their respective systems.
I hope that it is clear now
