

- #HOW TO COPY DVD ON MAC TO EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE FOR MAC#
- #HOW TO COPY DVD ON MAC TO EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE ISO#
#HOW TO COPY DVD ON MAC TO EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE FOR MAC#
Insert target DVD into your Mac's built-in DVD-ROM drive or an external one. (Convert Video to QUICKTIME for MAC Video to AVI for PC).

#HOW TO COPY DVD ON MAC TO EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE ISO#
Apple TV Samsung Q90R/Q900R QLED TV LG C9 OLED Series. First, make sure the hard drive on your Mac has at least 4GB to store a DVD copy as Disk Utility can only copy DVD to ISO Image, which is quite large in size. The WinToUSB takes such longer because of how it extracts files into their directories (instead of just doing a file copy), but it has made getting Windows installed on crappy WinPCs a cake walk. Copy DVDs to a computer, another DVD, external hard drive, USB, TV, iPad, or any gadget for free. Then later with a Mac with an optical drive you can. You can use Disk Utility to create a disk image of that DVD disk and store it on your hard drive. Saving the files piecemeal from the DVD disk will not save it as a video DVD. MS offers an option for the former, but usually it comes back saying it couldn't make the drive bootable. But if your Mac didnt come with an optical drive you may not have that app. External DVD drives are a great way to back up your Mac data, but they can also play discs and burn discs, which makes them a handy tool for other tasks.

The first one is great for taking, say, a Win ISO and making it into a football flash drive, and the latter will allow you to take a Win ISO and make it into a pre-installed OS-not just an installer-that you can then put into into another machine. Pretty clever.PS: Segue, for those that are looking that are looking for slick ways to get Win ISO and installations without having to burn bootable DVDs, Ive had a lot of success with the following apps: I was surprised to see this is possible over a LAN with a WinPC. I almost didn't click on this article because 1) this hasn't been an issue for me in a very long time, and 2) I thought it was a well-worn topic built into macOS since around the MacBook Air launch.
