Seagate Goflex Software For Mac

Seagate Goflex Software For Mac Average ratng: 5,0/5 3374 reviews
  • Seagate GoFlex Desk for Mac External Drive - Quick Start Guide, Installation, Troubleshooting Tips & Downloads.
  • Backup Plus and GoFlex Desk Thunderbolt Software for Mac. The Seagate Thunderbolt adapter driver is only needed if you are using 3TB or 4TB drives with the Thunderbolt adapter and plan to change drives with other GoFlex adapters (such as USB or FireWire).

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$219.99
  • Pros

    Mac formatted. Mac-oriented design. FireWire 800 and USB 2.0 cables included. Modular interface cable. 3-year warranty. Huge 1.5TB capacity.

  • Cons

    USB 3.0 not included. Little thicker than other drives. Only available in silver. Interface cables are easy to lose.

  • Bottom Line

    Interchangeable interfaces and a huge capacity put the Seagate GoFlex Ultra-portable Drive for Mac up as one of the front-runners in the external hard drive space. This drive is future-proofed with a humungous capacity.

Seagate Goflex Home Software For Mac

The Seagate GoFlex Ultra-portable Drive for Mac ($219.99 list) is a capacious monster hard drive for backing up your Apple Macintosh desktop or laptop. It has 1.5TB of hard drive space, more than enough for any computer smaller than a Mac Pro with multiple internal hard drives. Its interchangeable adapter cables future-proof it from advances in drive interfaces, though the most exciting interface (Thunderbolt) isn't here just yet. If you want to bet on that interface being available soon (and if you have a new Mac with Thunderbolt), then give the GoFlex for Mac a look. Otherwise there are one or two other drives that also merit your attention in the here and now.

  • $99.99
  • $199.99
  • $84.99

Seagate Goflex Satellite

Design and Features
The GoFlex for Mac comes in the chassis similar to other Seagate GoFlex portable drives, so they all are compatible with the GoFlex adapter cables and accessories. It measures 4 by 5 by 1 inches (HWD). Since the drive capacity is 1.5TB, it's a little thicker than the ones found on the standard drives, but they're all equally pocketable. The GoFlex drives come in silver, which matches the silver/aluminum motif of the current Mac desktops and laptops. This may be an annoyance if you wanted a red or a blue drive, but then again Mac users tend to like their tech products to match the Apple aesthetic.

Like the Windows-oriented Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex Ultra-Portable ($99.99 list, 4.5 stars) (500GB), the GoFlex for Mac has Seagate's GoFlex connector on the side. The GoFlex connector allows you to connect one of Seagate's other GoFlex adapter cables to the drive, increasing the devices you can use with the drive. The GoFlex for Mac comes with both USB 2.0 and FireWire 800 adapters, but the drive can pair with an optional USB 3.0 or powered eSATA connector. This way, you can upgrade the drive to work with both interfaces at a future time. No current Mac comes from Apple with a USB 3.0 or eSATA port, but you can of course add one if you have a free PCIe slot (Mac Pro) or a free ExpressCard slot (some MacBook Pro laptops). Though not announced with the latest round of MacBook Pros, it's a reasonable guess to predict that Seagate will have GoFlex adapters for Intel's new Thunderbolt interface in the future.

The GoFlex works right out of the box with Apple's Time Machine on Macs with Mac OS X 10.5 or later. You don't even have to reformat the drive, as you'd have to do on Windows-oriented drives. The GoFlex for Mac comes pre-formatted with the HFS+ (Mac-only) format. You can reformat the drive with FAT32 (Both Mac and Windows-compatible) or NTFS (Windows only) formats if you're going to be using the drive with a Windows PC. You can also download a HFS+ driver for Windows from Seagate in case you don't want to reformat the drive. The drive only comes with drive monitoring software for the Mac, so you may want another solution if you need to back up a Mac OS X 10.4 or older system. The Editors' Choice winning Iomega eGo Blackbelt ($199.99 list, 4 stars, 1TB) comes with backup software for older Macs (via download), as well as a one-year subscription for TrendMicro's Smart Surfing software for Macs.

Performance
The GoFlex is a good performer. On our Drag and Drop test, the GoFlex for Mac copied our 1.22GB test folder in a quick 24 seconds under FireWire 800 (vs. 22 seconds for the Iomega eGo), and a slower 37 seconds under USB 2.0 (vs. 35 secconds for the Iomega eGo). Speedier USB 3.0 drives like the HP Portable External Hard Drive (1TB) ($169.99 direct, 4 stars) can do the same task in 19 seconds. Note: We couldn't run our usual PCMark05 HDD tests on the drive, since it's Mac formatted.

Compared with the Windows-based HP Portable Hard Drive and Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex, both Editors' Choice winners, the GoFlex for Mac has an Apple-minded design and FireWire 800 connector in its favor. The HP Portable Hard Drive doesn't have FireWire 800 as an option, and the Windows-based GoFlex drive requires an added-cost extra adapter for FireWire.The Iomega eGo Blackbelt for Mac comes with both USB 2.0 and FireWire built in, but you can't add future functionality as you can with the GoFlex for Mac. Both the GoFlex for Mac and Iomega eGo come with a 3-year warranty. Prices are competitive, but the GoFlex for Mac is a bit cheaper in terms of dollar per GB (the GoFlex for Mac is 15 cents per GB, while the Iomega eGo is about 20 cents per GB.) The GoFlex for Mac is a bit more expensive overall ($220 vs. $200). Sims 2 castaway download. Plus, the Iomega eGo comes with backup software for Macs that don't have Time Machine, and it's ruggedized to survive drops and being knocked about in your bag during your commute. Thus, the Iomega eGo Blackbelt holds on to its crown as our Editors' Choice for Mac-oriented hard drives.

Seagate Goflex Software Download

COMPARISON TABLE
Compare the Seagate GoFlex Ultra-portable Drive for Mac (1.5TB) with several other hard drive side by side.

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Seagate GoFlex Ultra-portable Drive for Mac (1.5TB)

Bottom Line: Interchangeable interfaces and a huge capacity put the Seagate GoFlex Ultra-portable Drive for Mac up as one of the front-runners in the external hard drive space. This drive is future-proofed with a humungous capacity.

  • $99.99
  • $149.99
  • $99.99
  • $129.99
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HELP!

I have a FreeAgent GoFlex Home Drive that is connected to my router via ethernet. It is available to share files to anyone on our network. My Mac can see it no problem (so it's not a device problem). It was fine from my Windows 10 PC until the update that went in the last few weeks. It is a Windows 10 issue.

I have contacted Seagate and this is what they said:

Thank you for contacting Seagate Support. I understand Windows 10 is not seeing your GoFlex Home NAS on your network. I'm sorry for the inconvenience this is causing for you. I'd be glad to assist you.
As far as the Seagate Dashboard/Memeo Instant Backup software is concerned, the software is really not going to be of any benefit to you. The Seagate Dashboard/Memeo Instant Backup software is not compatible with Windows 10 anyway. The Seagate Dashboard/Memeo Instant Backup software was only supported in Windows XP through Windows 8, and there are no plans to update the software to include Windows 10 compatibility. software was only supported in Windows XP through Windows 7, and there are no plans to update the software to include Windows 10 compatibility.
The Paragon Driver software you downloaded only works with GoFlex USB connected external hard drives, not network drives.
I believe the reason Windows 10 is not seeing the GoFlex Home is probably because of an update that Microsoft pushed out recently that changed the way Windows 10 detects network devices. The GoFlex Home is dependent on a Microsoft protocol called SMBv1. Microsoft created this protocol and it was used for providing shared access to files, folders, printers, serial ports, and basically anything you wanted to share. This used to be the standard protocol on all previous versions of the Windows operating system. With the recent updates that Microsoft sent out for Windows 10, however, Windows 10 now has SMBv1 disabled by default in the Windows operating system. From my understanding, Microsoft did this to address some security flaws in the SMBv1 protocol. The only thing we can point you toward is this 3rd party knowledge base support article on how to enable SMBv1.
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Thanks!