List of Western Digital Mac Hard Disk Drive Drivers |
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Western Digital Hard Disk Drive Driver Update Utility |
WD My Book Device Driver |
WD10000C033, WD10000H1CS, WD10000H1Q, WD10000H2Q, WD10000H2U, WD15000C033... Driver |
WD10000C033, WD15000C033, WD20000C033, WD5000C033, WD6400C033 Driver (2) |
WD10000E032, WD1200B012, WD1600B012, WD1600C032, WD1600D032, WD2000B012, WD2500C032... Driver |
WD10000H1CS, WD15000H1CS, WD20000H1CS, WD3200H1CS, WD5000H1CS, WD6400H1CS, WD7500H1CS Driver |
WD10000H1Q, WD15000H1Q, WD20000H1Q, WD3200H1Q, WD5000H1Q, WD6400H1Q, WD7500H1Q Driver |
WD10000H2Q, WD20000H2Q, WD40000H2Q, WD60000H2Q Driver |
WD10000H2U, WD20000H2U Driver |
WD10000MET, WD1600MS, WD2500ML, WD3200ME, WD3200ML, WD3200MS, WD4000MT, WD5000ME... Driver |
WD1200B011, WD1200B015, WD1600B011, WD1600B015, WD2000B011, WD2000B015, WD2500B011... Driver |
WD1600B019, WD2500B019, WD3200B019, WD5000B019 Driver (2) |
WD1600H1U, WD20000H1CS, WD20000H1Q, WD20000H1U, WD2500ME, WD2500MS, WD3200H1CS... Driver |
WD1600MS, WD20000H1CS, WD2500ML, WD2500MS, WD3200ML, WD3200MS, WD3200MT, WD4000ML... Driver |
WD_RAIDManager Driver |
WDBAAA2500ABK, WDBAAA3200ABK, WDBAAA5000ABK, WDBAAA5000AD5, WDBAAA5000AD6... Driver (2) |
WDBAAA2500ABK, WDBAAA3200ABL, WDBAAA3200AWT, WDBAAA5000AWT, WDBAAA6400ABL... Driver |
WDBAAA2500ABK, WDBAAA3200ARD, WDBAAA3200AWT, WDBAAA5000ABK, WDBAAA5000ABL... Driver |
WDBAAA3200ABK, WDBAAA3200ABL, WDBAAA3200ASL, WDBAAA5000AD2, WDBAAA5000AD4... Driver |
WDBAAA3200ABK, WDBAAA3200ARD, WDBAAA3200ASL, WDBAAA5000ABK, WDBAAA5000AD1... Driver |
WDBAAA3200ABL, WDBAAA3200ARD, WDBAAA3200ASL, WDBAAA3200AWT, WDBAAA5000ABL... Driver |
WDBAAA3200ABL, WDBAAA3200ARD, WDBAAA3200AWT, WDBAAA5000ABL, WDBAAA5000AD2... Driver |
WDBAAA3200ASL, WDBAAA5000AD1, WDBAAA6400ASL, WDBAAA6400AWT, WDBAAB2500ASL... Driver |
WDBAAA5000ABL Driver |
WDBAAA5000AD2, WDBAAA6400ABL, WDBAAA6400ASL, WDBAAB2500ASL, WDBAAB4000ASL... Driver |
WDBAAA5000AWT Driver |
WDBAAB2500ASL, WDBAAB3200ASL, WDBAAB5000ASL Driver |
WDBAAE3200ASL, WDBAAE5000ASL, WDBAAE6400ASL, WDBABW0010BSL, WDBACX0010BBK... Driver |
WDBAAF0010HBK, WDBAAF0015HBK, WDBAAF0020HBK, WDBAAF5000EBK, WDBAAF6400EBK... Driver |
WDBACY5000ARD Driver |
Western Digital Hard Disk Utility
Acronis True Image WD Edition Software. Data Lifeguard Diagnostic for Windows. WD Drive Utilities for Windows. WD Security for Windows. WD SmartWare. WD Sync for Windows. WD Universal Firmware Updater for Windows. Western Digital SSD Dashboard. Software for Mac Install WD Discovery for Mac. WD Access for Mac. WD Arkeia Network Backup.
Western Digital Hard Disk Controller Driver Download
For the sake of this thread (possibly) helping others who also search for this stuff later as well, I didn't actually need to search/download the driver.
Ultimately my mission was to partition that one drive which the people who made my computer did so Windows 7 could reside in a smaller amount of space (in C drive), while the virtual environment would operate multiple OS and test spaces in the other partitions; hopefully leaving the base OS (in C drive) relatively free from accumulating a whole lot of extra files over time.
So, when you're unsatisfied with the way the people who built your computer set it up on just the one drive, here's what I just did:
(Disclaimer: I'm new to all of this and not sure if this is the best way to go around it, but it's how I eventually got around my problem)
1. Right-click on 'Computer' from the 'Start' pearl to click on 'Manage'.
2. Click 'Disk Management' (found under 'Storage'), then right-click on C drive to click on 'Shrink Volume...'
3. Shrink it to half it's size (default).
4. Right click on the Unallocated partition to format, choose 'New Simple Volume...'
5. Fly through the wizard then re-install Windows 7 choosing the custom option and putting the new Windows 7 install on the newly formatted drive.
6. Next I just removed/cleaned C drive, and created it again at only 50GB's (could have made it smaller but didn't), then re-installed Windows 7 again on new (smaller) C drive.
7. Okay, off to install VMware on the new (larger) partition now... Hope this helped someone else.
If not, please reply with anything/everything done wrong; I'm really open to criticism for the sake of getting much better at this.
Cheers : )
Ultimately my mission was to partition that one drive which the people who made my computer did so Windows 7 could reside in a smaller amount of space (in C drive), while the virtual environment would operate multiple OS and test spaces in the other partitions; hopefully leaving the base OS (in C drive) relatively free from accumulating a whole lot of extra files over time.
So, when you're unsatisfied with the way the people who built your computer set it up on just the one drive, here's what I just did:
(Disclaimer: I'm new to all of this and not sure if this is the best way to go around it, but it's how I eventually got around my problem)
1. Right-click on 'Computer' from the 'Start' pearl to click on 'Manage'.
2. Click 'Disk Management' (found under 'Storage'), then right-click on C drive to click on 'Shrink Volume...'
3. Shrink it to half it's size (default).
4. Right click on the Unallocated partition to format, choose 'New Simple Volume...'
5. Fly through the wizard then re-install Windows 7 choosing the custom option and putting the new Windows 7 install on the newly formatted drive.
6. Next I just removed/cleaned C drive, and created it again at only 50GB's (could have made it smaller but didn't), then re-installed Windows 7 again on new (smaller) C drive.
7. Okay, off to install VMware on the new (larger) partition now... Hope this helped someone else.
If not, please reply with anything/everything done wrong; I'm really open to criticism for the sake of getting much better at this.
Cheers : )