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Official sd card formatter
Official sd card formatter








official sd card formatter
  1. #OFFICIAL SD CARD FORMATTER PORTABLE#
  2. #OFFICIAL SD CARD FORMATTER SOFTWARE#
  3. #OFFICIAL SD CARD FORMATTER CODE#
  4. #OFFICIAL SD CARD FORMATTER WINDOWS#

Upon launching Easeus, you will be shown a screen like the one below. The process is identical, but the reported volume sizes will be different. Partitioning With Easeus Partition Masterįor the purpose of this tutorial I will be using an old 32GB Micro SD card as I have already formatted my 64GB and loaded it up with music and stuff.

#OFFICIAL SD CARD FORMATTER WINDOWS#

Unfortunately even though I was able to find the boot disk files online, they wouldn't run within 64-bit Windows - they might possibly work within DOSbox though. If you are a little more experienced with computers, or have used Linux in the past and are familiar with the filesystem structure, you could also use a GParted Live CD which boots into a basic version of Debian with the GParted program which is simple to use.Īdditionally you could possibly use a Windows 98/ME boot disc or Windows setup disk to get into DOS and run fdisk.

#OFFICIAL SD CARD FORMATTER SOFTWARE#

None of which would allow me to create a FAT32 partition of 64GB.įortunately, third party partitioning software will allow you to create FAT32 partitions in excess of 32GB, so it was time to find an alternative.įor simple partitioning, I found Easeus Partition Master which has a free version with all the functionality we need (for my final formatting, I eventually decided to use some tools supplied in Linux, but I'll come to that later as it concerns aligning the SD card too). I had tried formatting by right clicking the drive in "Computer", through launching diskmgmt.msc via the command prompt, and then even resorting to the CLI format utility, diskpart. My only guess is that Microsoft wanted to push NTFS as the dominant filesystem since it's a lot more robust. You see Microsoft impose a 32GB limit on partiton sizes for FAT32 in recent operating systems (XP onward I believe), despite the filesystem supporting partitions up to 2TB on paper. For whatever reason, my S2 refused to format the card (but since I formatted the card, my phone will do it no problem now) which meant I had to do it on my computer, and immediately I ran into an old problem.

official sd card formatter official sd card formatter

So unfortunately that left me with FAT32. The card even works on my 2008 Nokia N96!

#OFFICIAL SD CARD FORMATTER CODE#

Hopefully since the Galaxy S3 supports exFAT the code will be retroported to the S2 (everything crossed). So why can't it mount EXT4 SD cards? I had also tried mounting external NTFS HDDs before with no luck, so I knew not to bother wasting my time with that. I found that with the Galaxy S2, EXT2, EXT3 and EXT4 were not supported, which was quite annoying and odd since that the internal memory of the Galaxy S2 uses EXT4.

#OFFICIAL SD CARD FORMATTER PORTABLE#

I tried the Linux filesystems first such as EXT2, EXT3 and EXT4, as the default filesystem FAT32 has a 4GB maximum filesize limitation, and I intended to use my phone as a portable HDD too (very useful for transporting or downloading Linux ISOs if you are caught out with a dead computer). The first challenge was to format the card in a filesystem the Galaxy S2 could read. It appeared that my card shipped unformatted, which meant it had no filesystem. When I inserted the card into the phone, the phone said that the card is damaged or unreadable. Initially you may run into some difficulty. He had tried the card in the device, and once I saw that it was working, I decided to take a punt and buy one for myself.Ħ4GB Micro SD card working flawlessly in my Galaxy S2, which claims to only support up to 32GB. Samsung claim the Galaxy S2 supports a maximum of 32GB via it's Micro SD card slot, but as the owner of AndroidNZ found out, this wasn't strictly true. Many devices report their maximum supported card size as 32GB, but this didn't stop me buying a Sandisk 64GB Micro SD for my Galaxy S2 and playing around with it. For a long time, flash memory for mobile phones and portable audio players seems to have been stuck at around 32GB.










Official sd card formatter