This item Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex Desk 1.5 TB USB 2.0 External Hard Drive STAC1500100 Seagate Portable 2TB External Hard Drive Portable HDD – USB 3.0 for PC, Mac, PS4, & Xbox - 1-year Rescue Service (STGX2000400). In fact, the Seagate GoFlex 3TB drive is about 2/3rds the size of a Seagate Desk Drive 500Gb that I picked up two years ago. Installation is a breeze. It's plug and play for Windows users, and a couple of mouse clicks on the drive's included installation program for Mac users (no need to pull up Disk Utility). The GoFlex drive comes preformatted with an NTFS partition. If you have already reformatted the drive in MacOS and find that the.dmg file is unusable, make sure the drive is named 'FreeAgent GoFlex Drive', and that the Windows files are on the drive as well as the.dmg file. The Seagate FreeAgent Go is a portable external drive for photos, music, videos, and more by Seagate. FreeAgent external hard drives range in size from 60 GB to 3 TB. The FreeAgent Go was released in May 2010 as an updated range of FreeAgent drives including the FreeAgent Desk, FreeAgent GoFlex, and FreeAgent Xtreme.
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Seagate Freeagent Goflex Drivers For Mac Seagate
![Pro Pro](/uploads/1/1/8/3/118392217/305253772.jpg)
I am now using a USB 2.0 interface with my GoFlex enabling it to mount, but the 3.0 connection is simply not working!
Any comments, tips or suggestions? I will of course be buying a new HD and trying to get my $ back for the GoFlex but any help would be greatly appreciated.
Has anyone found a solution to this problem?
Are there other suggestions for a 3.0 portable external that will 100% certainly work with the new mac USB 3.0 ports? I have a sordid and hellish history with WD so I'm apt to opt away from them. They have a history of sudden failure that I'm aware of by way of personal experience.
Seagate Freeagent Goflex Drivers For Macbook
What about Iomegas?
![Seagate freeagent goflex drivers for macbook pro Seagate freeagent goflex drivers for macbook pro](/uploads/1/1/8/3/118392217/665037263.jpg)
Or am I better off building my own?
I think it's the drivers etc that are getting in the way, so maybe a very simple 2.5' HD with a seagate esata to 3.0 cable in a generic enclosure would do the trick?
Thoughts anyone?
Aug 21, 2012 12:42 PM