Note: This is an important bugfix release which solves the issue described in KB974729.What's new since 2009.11.14:- All in the NTFS-3G release notes.
- In particular, this release solves the problem where NTFS-3G in rare cases renders an NTFS volume unmountable in Windows Vista and Windows 7, as described in KB974729.
Users are encouraged to apply the hotfix provided by Microsoft, designed to fix the issue for existing drives.
- Bugfix: Formatting NTFS volumes failed for some people because of a bug in the formatting utility.
The development of NTFS-3G for Mac OS X is funded by
Tuxera Ltd.Many of you have probably noticed that we now have a commercially supported counterpart to NTFS-3G,
Tuxera NTFS for Mac.
Tuxera NTFS for Mac builds on the reliable NTFS-3G code base, but has several premium enhancements. The most important one is the new high performance caching layer which makes Tuxera NTFS at least twice as fast as cached NTFS-3G, but in many cases boosts performance even more (see:
performance comparison).
The Tuxera NTFS for Mac caching layer also eliminates the need to choose between safety (in the event of a power outage or system crash) and performance, which is a choice you'll have to make in NTFS-3G.
Read more...Download:System requirements:- Mac OS X 10.4/10.5/10.6 (10.6 requires that you do not use the 64-bit kernel), running on an Intel or PowerPC computer.
The package has been tested with
Mac OS X 10.4.11/PowerPC/Intel,
Mac OS X 10.5.8/PowerPC and
Mac OS X 10.6.2/Intel/64-bit Intel.
NTFS-3G includes and depends on
MacFUSE.
Information on how to install and use NTFS-3G for Mac OS X can be found in the
User Guide.
If you are having problems with NTFS-3G, then please write a forum post explaining your problems in the
Tuxera Forums (or post the question as a blog comment if you're just unsure of how things work).
Known issues:- After installing ntfs-3g, all NTFS drives will disappear from the "Startup Disk" preference pane. Disabling or uninstalling ntfs-3g brings them back. It seems that this issue can't be solved, but only worked around since the Startup Disk preference pane doesn't recognize file system drivers that are not provided by Apple.
Possible workarounds:- Holding down the Option key during boot (or Alt for non-Apple keyboards).
- Intel users only: Install the rEFIt boot manager for better control of the boot process.
- Using the command line utility bless (see man bless for more information)