Configuration:
Nexus Player Bios up to date.
Ethernet
1 PNY 16GB flash drive used as internal storage, working fine.
1 Kingston(?) 8GB flash drive set as removable storage, used for testing. I am able to add and remove files from it without problems.
1 111GB USB HDD I can only read from but not write to.
Issues:
I am overly confused about write permissions with Android. I have tried following the threads about how only the app that created the folder can write to it.
The 8 GB has never been used in Android before just like the 111GB. So why can the 8GB be written to but the the 111GB can't?
Goal: To use the 111GB to store media while still being able to add and remove files as needed.
*Note, I am not ready to root.
Related
If you need a program to format a FAT32 flash drive that is larger than 32 GBs, i.e., a 64 GBs flash drive. Here's a link to the Verbatim website where you can get the tool for Windows including Windows 7.
http://www.verbatim.com/index/searc...form_submit.x=13&basic_search_form_submit.y=5
If it doesn't link then go to the verbatim.com website. Do a search in it for FAT 32. The page with the FAT32 tool download should come up.
I bought a Centon 64 GB flash drive and it came already formatted with NTFS. That's great but I wanted the most transportability and FAT32 format would be better to transfer files back and forth between my PS3, computer and Acer Iconia A500.
The price for the Centon 64 GB drive from Tiger Direct was only $29.99, no taxes and no shipping costs. Not bad, but it is a slow flash drive. Now that I got it formatted for FAT32 I'm happy. BTW, I have found when you have a FAT32 formatted flash drive attached to the USB port and you do a nandroid backup, it defaults to the USB port instead of the SD card I have in the SD slot. However, if the USB flash drive is formatted with NTFS it doen't see it for the backup and goes instead to the SD card. You can have your backups saved externally from the Acer Iconia A500.
Enjoy the FAT32 formatter. It wasn't easy to find. There's a commerical product for $40 that you can sample, which will only format to 8 GBs with trial version. It's the one that keeps coming up in searches for "NTFS to FAT32". Don't bother with that junk. Get the free one from Verbatim.
couldnt you just use gparted live cd to format, but good find anyways
I use the Easius partition manager... It was free online when I got it but not sure now...
Thanks for the feedback
I don't know much about the Android system so I didn't know about the "gparted live cd" or about the "Easius partition manager." I'm more familar with Windows so I usually look for the solutions through that system. They didn't come up in any internet searches I did. Partition Magic did and I had an older copy but i couldn't get it to work with Windows 7. Then I found the free Verbatim program. Great free program.
I'll keep them in mind if I have any problems in the future.
I had ran into this problem a while back with a external hard drive that came NTFS formatted and I needed it to be FAT32 for reading by a PS3. Usually the hard drive manufacturer has some program to convert his drive. The problem is it only works for their hard drive and they won't let it work on others. There was another free FAT32 formatter that I had previously used but that one wouldn't work on my Centon 64 GB flash drive. Searching the internet was a pain because they kept coming up with this program you had to pay for. On Pirates Bay, they had a crack for it, but it was no good. I was going to try and use a MAC to format but I found this program buried in a discussion about FAT32. Initially it didn't recognize the flash drive but later after I must have rebooted the computer it saw the flash drive and it worked.
Thanks for the feedback.
Use Minitool Partition Wizard, its freeware and for windows. Best windows partition editor I have ever used. I'm sure it can format that drive for you.
http://www.partitionwizard.com/free-partition-manager.html
CORRECTION: Best disk partitioner for windows that I have ever used,
Easius partition manager is also a windows app.... I used it to repartition my laptop as the mongrel only had c partition. Works on all hdds and sd cards....
Hi everybody, i have a question for Asus Nexus 7 users.
I want to buy Nexus 7 device, but first i have some questions:
»Is possible to download files bigger than 4GB and store them in the internal memory(32GB)?
»According to aTorrent "Large files support (for FAT32 SD cards - 4Gb maximum, for internal storage - unlimited)" only this program can use "unlimited storage" for downloads?
»Is Nexus internal memory work as a storage device like a Ex HDD or USB flash drive right when connected to PC right?
»?Last but also important: I intend to use a VPN server along with Torrent app, for downloads, is that possible? (as i do with computer)
Is it possible to get 128GB flash drive working as internal storage in marshmallow? I formatted my pny 128GB flashdrive to fat32 using diskpart and when I try to format it in nexus player to use as internal storage, it quits after around 5 mins saying that it couldn't format the drive. I currently have a 16gb driver as internal storage and it's running out of space. Also I'm using a USB hub with a otg cable if that helps. Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks.
I am using an old 250gb sata HDD via a hub with eithernet and it works. Esfilemanager will sometimes crash it requiring a hard reboot to reactivate it but do far so good.
Did you format it in Android so that you can use it as internal storage? I can plug it in as removable storage but can't use it as internal storage.
Make sure you partition as FAT 32 and Master Boot Record instead of GUID Partition or Apple Partition Mac, just to make sure. And remember that FAT 32 won't handle files larger than 4GB, so keep that in mind. If you have the need to use larger than 4GB files you can format the drive to NTFS on Mac using the Tuxera driver or any other third party NTFS driver; Android does read NTFS partitions.
nd4spdviper said:
Make sure you partition as FAT 32 and Master Boot Record instead of GUID Partition or Apple Partition Mac, just to make sure. And remember that FAT 32 won't handle files larger than 4GB, so keep that in mind. If you have the need to use larger than 4GB files you can format the drive to NTFS on Mac using the Tuxera driver or any other third party NTFS driver; Android does read NTFS partitions.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I formatted it as fat 32 and MBR using partitionwizard and still having the same issue. Does anybody have any other suggestions that can fix this?
I formatted my 128gb usb stick to a NTFS files system in a windows machine and then as "internal" in the Nexus Player.
I tried with a 16gb flash drive and 1tb USB hard drive and was able to use any as internal storage. As a matter of fact, the 1tb drive had 3 partitions and the Nexus wiped them for or good and used the entire tera as internal storage.
Hi,
Same problem for me with a 64GB kingston flash drive ... The nexus player fails to format the key as an internal storage. If I try to format as a general USB storage it works, and my key become a 64GB external storage in FAT32 (but useless for me, I have to store big files > 4GB ...). So i want to use it as an internal storage.
Any ideas why the internal storage format option goes into error ?
ichi11 said:
Hi,
Same problem for me with a 64GB kingston flash drive ... The nexus player fails to format the key as an internal storage. If I try to format as a general USB storage it works, and my key become a 64GB external storage in FAT32 (but useless for me, I have to store big files > 4GB ...). So i want to use it as an internal storage.
Any ideas why the internal storage format option goes into error ?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have exactly the same problem.
Perhaps it depends on the flash drive model ? Does people getting it working can share their flash drive model ? (I don't want to buy 50 flash drive before I can expand the internal storage ... )
For me, this flash drive doesn't work : Kingston DataTraveler Micro 3.1
I have a 32gb 3.0 flash drive and want to replace it with a 64 or 128gb. What is the process to do this without losing any data?
I've read the nvidia shield website and it isn't clear to me, as it mostly seems to refer to sd cards.
Is it formatted as adopted storage? If not, just use a computer and copy the data.
Fire HD 10 (9th generation)
Fire os 7.3.1.7
Ok really? Amazon blocked file support for ExFat? Is there a way around this at all? I have a 64 GB I was planning to put some movies on for my next flight. But the 4 GB file size limit of Fat32 is hampering my plans...
Installed the Play store following the guide here. Boy - I'd love to get AOSP or something on here but that isn't looking so good right yet. Anyway - any tips or tricks to get movies going would be appreciated.
Regards
I use exFAT/NTFS for USB by Paragon Software from Playstore (actually I downloaded it from apkpure first to avoid the store) to manage my movies on NTFS formatted HDDs. The settings section of the app shows I can access NTFS, exFAT, HFS+, FAT32, extFS.
Actually there was a limited number to mount my drive for free and when it was over I had to pay a small fee (I hope it is not something regularly, have to check again) and register via my Google account which meant I had go install Playstore to get access to my Google account on my Fire HD 10.
It works fine for me. Use it with Total Commander. I tried to find a solution first from Amazon Appstore but failed. I extended the Fire HD 10 internal memory btw with a 400GB SanDisk MC which is ext4 formatted with no relevant file size limit for movie files.
Let me know if it works for you. My next project is to do the same with my Fire TV Cube.
BR Martin
Hey Submonte - thanks for the idea. I downloaded paragon but I think it is angled toward USB mounted drives like the external hdd you mentioned. But slipping the micro SD card in - doesn't do anything.
Hmm...
Ah I see. You want to use your microSD card as Portable memory. I excluded that option for me (but never trying the exFAT app in this way), got a Tutuo USB C OTG adapter (micro SD and SD and USB A) and set the memory option of my Fire HD 10 for the SanDisk card to internal memory. So I copy movies from external micro SD or HDD (mounted by the Paragon USB app) to the extended internal memory (Android: Adoptable memory). Of course in this case I cannot take out the card and put it into a laptop or so, it is not portable, internally formatted as ext 4, but has no file size limit.
Okay - I might see a ray of hope here... So I get "Adopted Storage"... So if I power off the tab - can I remove it - mount as ext4 on my linux laptop and copy over all the files and then power it back up? If so - how crazy is that - it won't recognize it when I format it in my laptop as ext4...
I read somewhere it is a big FU from Amazon on no way they want you watching HD movies with out buying them from Amazon. Thought that was ranting - but if it supports ext4 "internally" but purposely blocks it in this way??
Anyway - thanks for the reply. Gonna make some tests...
Adopting the storage in Android/Fire OS settings means the micro SD will be reformatted from exFAT or FAT32 to ext4 (or f2fs eventually in other cases - Samsung) and tied to the particular device (the Fire HD 10 in your case) by a key stored in the device. The internal built in storage (eg 64GB in my HD 10) will be extended and the micro SD memory an integrated part of it. Provided you unmount the card and remount it the device will recognize it again eventually, but no warranty. It is not dedicated to be portable even if you format it ext4 on your linux pc. Therefore I chose the way I described.
By the way I use Prime Video on this and other devices (and many other Amazon services) and use also their offers and buy movies for 50% off or so. Their Echos and so on are great. It is their right to restrict the interfaces in their devices (Still we get a lot for our money). However I wanted to use my tablet universally and do what I want with it. I am a supporter of open standards since my first steps in computing during 70s and 80s, hard and soft. It remained as a hobby. Let me know if you make progress. BR Martin
No joy. I inserted another 64GB SD into the Fire HD 10 and told it to use it as internal
Using the USB cable I copied an 8GB video over to the tablet. Shut the tablet down and took out the card and looked at it in Gparted in Linux
The card has 2 partitions
16 MB partition FAT32
59.46 GB partition file format is unknown
The video is not on the card. It is on the tablet though. Leads me to believe that the unknown format might still have a 4GB limit.
Oh and as for my comments on Amazon. Not really dissing this at all. This is a slick tablet for the price or heck - twice the price. My commentary really was that standard Android OS supports read/write of exfat and maybe ext4?. Just wish that Amazon OS did.
Tks for your report! Let me try something out, too. Need some days to get back to you, my holidays are over.
I don't think there is answer to this. I have made 100 experiments and really only 2 things work. I can format the card FAT32 and put it into the card reader or I can format a thumb drive FAT32 and put into an adapter and into the USB C port. Any other formats in the SD card slot or via OTG on the USB C port all fail to read the file system.
In contrast - my Samsung tablet seems to accept FAT32 and exFAT formatted SD cards into the slot. It excepts FAT32 and NTFS formated thumb drives via OTG on the USB C port. Really - NTFS.
For fun I installed a terminal on the Fire HD and tried typing:
Code:
$ sudo apt-get install exfat-fuse exfat-utils
But the terminal doesn't support sudo. Probably not even close to the correct commands for the FireHD - but it adds support for exfat in Debian linux distros if not included.
Anyway - I'm still looking but for now I am transcoding some blue-rays to make smaller files. Just seems like wasted time.
I also need exfat or ntfs for SDHC cards, for few amazon fire hd 10 2019.
as I understand, Microsoft is asking for a few dollars for a exfat or ntfs licenses,
so no support in stock firmware.
write if there is news. thanks/
I found a solution to get a 128 GB micro SD card working in my Fire HD 10 11th generation. The card must be formatted as FAT32, otherwise it will not work.
I accomplished it by attaching the card to the USB-C port on the tablet (using a white USB-C adapter that came with my Pixel phone and Transcend USB card reader). The tablet detected this card and allowed me to format it. When I connected the card formatted in the tablet to PC it showed it was formatted as FAT32 and the total capacity showed correctly as 128 GB.
FAT32 maximum partition size is 2TB unfortunately Windows did not allow me to format my card as FAT32. Card needs to be formatted on Android device to be useful in Fire HD 10.