Exchanging Data with Windows PCs

It's no surprise that the Mac is great at transferring information among Mac programs. The big news is how easy Mac OS X makes it to transfer files between Macs and Windows computers.

Documents can take one of several roads between your Mac and a Windows machine; many of these methods are the same as Mac-to-Mac transfers. For example, you can transfer a file on a disk (such as a CD or Zip disk), on a flash drive, via network, by Bluetooth, on an iPod, as an attachment to an email message, via Web page, as an FTP download, and so on. The following pages offer some pointers on these various transfer schemes.

Preparing the Document for Transfer

Without special adapters, you can't plug an American appliance into a European power outlet, play a CD on a cassette deck, or open a Macintosh file in Windows. Therefore, before sending a document to a colleague who uses Windows, you must be able to answer "yes" to both of the questions below.

Is the document in a file format Windows understands?

Most popular programs are sold in both Mac and Windows flavors, and the documents they create are freely interchangeable. For example, documents created by recent versions of Word, Excel, PowerPoint, FileMaker, Free Hand, Illustrator, Photoshop, Dreamweaver, and many other Mac programs don't need any conversion. The corresponding Windows versions of those programs open such documents with nary a hiccup.

Files in one of the standard exchange formats don't need conversion, either. ...

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