Pazu Netflix Video Downloader will help you download Netflix movies and TV shows to MP4/MKV on your Mac or Windows. It downloads Netflix movies and TV shows in HD 1080p with multi-language audio tracks and subtitles you want. Featured a unique video downloading core, Pazu Netflix Video Downloader can download Netflix videos at a fast speed. After downloading you can save them to external hard drive and plug it into any device that supports USB. The downloaded TV shows and movies are still playable even after you cancel your Netflix subscription. The following is the detailed tutorial to guide you to download Netflix movies and TV shows with Pazu Netflix Video Downloader.
Run Pazu Netflix Video Downloader on Windows and Mac, you will be prompt to log in to Netflix. Or enter any word into the search bar, and press the search button, then the login window will appear. Enter your account info to sign in Netflix on Pazu Netflix Video Downloader.
If you are downloading a movie, there is a Setting icon next to the Download icon. Click it to choose the exact audios and subtitles languages. Click on the Download icon to start downloading the Netflix movie.
If you are downloading a TV show, after clicking the download icon. You will see all episodes and Setting buttons on the pop-up window. You need to select the episodes you want to download and click the Setting button to choose the exact audios and subtitles languages, then click the Download button.
Connect your external hard drive to the computer, then copy and paste the downloaded videos from your computer to the external hard drive. You can save these downloaded Netflix movies and TV shows on your hard drive forever. Connect this external hard drive to your iPadOS or iOS 13 devices, Android device or any computer and watch the downloaded Netflix videos anywhere you want. In the same way, you can also save Netflix downloads to USB drive and SD cards. Or save movies or shows from Netflix onto the Steam Deck, Nintendo Switch.
Thanks to the Netflix download function, users can download certain movies and TV shows on mobile phones, tablets, and laptops, which makes it easy to watch the videos without an internet connection during the trip. However, if you try to store too many movies or shows on your computers, you may quickly run out of internal storage space. To free up the storage space on your computer, you might have to delete or move the original downloaded videos away. In this case, for better saving more video collections, you can try to store the videos on an external hard drive, which can also free you to lose something important on your computer.
Netflix videos are not transferable and limited to be played on the Netflix app. When you move Netflix downloads to your external hard drive and then attempt to watch them by connecting the drive to another device, you will find that none of them can be played normally. To make Netflix videos compatible with other devices, you need to download Netflix videos with a professional video downloader, for example, TunePat Netflix Video Downloader. It is a powerful videos downloader that is capable of downloading movies and TV shows from the Netflix web player directly, which will let you move the downloaded files to any device without limits.
TunePat Netflix Video Downloader enables you to download high-quality Netflix videos and save them in MP4 or MKV format with multi-language audio tracks and subtitles preserved, which will make the downloaded Netflix movies or TV shows playable on multiple devices. Adopts the unique information analyzing system, TunePat has the ability to search for Netflix videos by name and URL, and download videos at a fast speed. By using TunePat, you can save thousands of Netflix videos to the external hard drive and watch the videos at any time.
Browse and find the movie or TV show you want to download, choose the video, and click the green download button on the bottom right corner. Or you can search your video by clicking the search icon on ther upper-right corner.
Click the "Settings" icon to choose the video format, video quality, audio type, and select the language of audio tracks and subtitles. In addition, you can choose to save the subtitle files in three modes (External Subtitles, Internal Subtitles, and Hardcode Subtitles).
At this point, you have the option to customize your download settings. These settings allow you to choose the video quality, audio tracks, and subtitles. If you're downloading a movie, you'll encounter the advanced download settings window after clicking the download button. For TV shows, you should first select the episodes and then click the "Advanced Download" button to access this window.
Once you've configured your preferences, click the "Download" button to begin the download process. Your video will be saved at a fast speed. If you wish to add more titles to the download queue, simply repeat the steps outlined above.
Connect your external hard drive to the computer and find it on your computer. Create a new folder on the drive to save Netflix videos. Then copy and paste the downloaded videos from your computer to the external hard drive. Those files will be stored on your drive forever.
If you want to download a large number of movies and TV shows for offline viewing, saving Netflix videos to an external hard drive will be a good choice. And TunePat Netflix Video Downloader will be your good partner to download high-quality videos from Netflix and help you save Netflix videos in MP4 or MKV format that is widely accepted by most devices.
I have been using a Netgear R7800 router for about a year and have had no issues with it. I haven't dug into the additional features or this equipment but would like to start using it to help with backing up folders as well as using it to share pictures and videos across wifi. That being said, here's what we have in the house:
Netgear offers a list of compatable hard drives. Since this model is older, so are the HDs listed on their site ( -my-USB-drive-work-with-ReadySHARE). I'd like a 4TB or more HD to connect, and the few that are listed there are either not available, expensive, or of lesser quality than I'd prefer. Is there a way to verify any other option before purchasing a "better" HD?
In my case, first I already had the drives, both USB 2.0 and 3.0. They were attached to our PC's. 2 and 4TB WD's self-powered. Neither was really being used fully. That drove me to putting one on the router was I had some DVD's I ripped and put them on the drive and was sharing them from my PC to the iPad's and SmartTV. Only problem, PC had to be on all the time, so I moved that drive to the Router, made it easier for me. I also backed up from the PC's our pictures. We do make local backups on our 2 main PC's and occasionally I'll move one to the USB router drive as well. Basically the drive is used access only, and not being written to it most of the time, only rarely. It works for me at a minimum cost.
Many people actively use the drive it seems. As far as I can tell, if you are going to 'actively' use the drive, a NAS is the way to go, mostly because of access write speed. Sure storage space is larger, but so is the cost.
I suspect on a NAS you can get better control of access as well. We do have guests and family that connect to the LAN and I've password protected the main drive and created a share for the video's anyone can use. I'd have liked to password protected them too, but many DLNA clients can't handle that.
Right now, only a 2TB on the router (USB 2.0, speed is not a write concern to me), I've got about 800GB's of files, 6600 of them. Movies all ripped to other formats, 172 of them in various sizes (some small home stuff from camcorder), about 300GB's. Pictures, 6400 of them for 39GB's. The Acronis backup copies take up most of the space.
As I said, your situation might be different. If nothing else, and either you have a drive or want to spend a minimal amount, 4TB External Desktop drives are really cheap these days, might be worth a try. From your description of what you intend to do, it does sort of match mine?
I can't address the Apple question if Readyshare works or not. It should work using the Router USB device for sharing without the Readyshare program as well, and I have seen other people stating they have used it if that matters.
As for the USB drive... that list is almost useless IMHO. First, it is only a LIST that NG Support has TESTED and known to work. Want to be sure, get one of those, but really many many more do work. There are some simple rules though, and in some cases of drives, those really do not matter. The filesystem on the routers is not a full blown filesystem, and may not be the same 'feature rich' on all routers.
Do you have any thoughts on going with a NAS instead of a configuration like I originally posted? I've been contemplating that route for awhile now. The advantages for me would be for more storage space, which could also allow redundancy. We will be storing mostly family pictures and videos on whichever route we go as a means to backup those files as well as share them on the home network.
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