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peat moss
December 10th, 2009, 10:12 PM
Hi, new to the NTFS for Mac product and new to the Mac world generally.

I'm intrigued by the prospect of being able to both read and write to Windows from Mac. I was wondering...Does NTFS for Mac allow one to also launch Windows applications from the Mac side? If not, how are applications different from reading/writing files and folders with regard to file systems/formats?

Could I open a new document in an existing WORD document from the Mac side?

Thanks.

Paragon_Tommy
December 11th, 2009, 12:28 PM
The fundamental feature of NTFS for Mac is for you to be able to read and write any files that resides on an NTFS file system, whether it's a Windows partition or an external hard drive. For instance, if you have a document, image, video, or audio file that's on your Windows partition, you can open, edit, and save from your Mac side. However, you cannot launch programs that was installed on the Windows side in Mac; simply not because your Mac can't read or write to the application, but it does not understand since it was written for Windows. But files like documents, images, videos, and audio are universal to both platforms.

peat moss
December 11th, 2009, 03:47 PM
Thank you.

So files are different than applications? When I open a WORD file though, I seem to get a document embedded within the application. All the tool bars and rulers come up as if I was in the actual application. I can open a new blank document. I don't quite understand.

Paragon_Tommy
December 11th, 2009, 04:36 PM
If you open a document from the Windows partition, you're actually just reading the document file, but to read any document file, you need a program that's able understand it. For example if your document is a word file (.doc or .docx), we know that file is created by Microsoft Word. If you were in Windows, you would open that file with Microsoft Word, but in Mac, you have to use another program that can read Microsoft Word, or install the Mac version of Microsoft Word.

peat moss
December 11th, 2009, 06:09 PM
-{ Quote: "If you open a document from the Windows partition, you're actually just reading the document file, but to read any document file, you need a program that's able understand it. ." }-

So is NTFS for Mac a program, or is it something else?


-{ Quote: "For example if your document is a word file (.doc or .docx), we know that file is created by Microsoft Word. If you were in Windows, you would open that file with Microsoft Word, but in Mac, you have to use another program that can read Microsoft Word, or install the Mac version of Microsoft Word." }-

What does NTFS for Mac do exactly that allows the reading and writing of a Microsoft file from Mac?

Paragon_Tommy
December 11th, 2009, 06:41 PM
It's a program and driver that lets Mac do more than what it natively can't, and that's write to an NTFS partition.