If you mean mac of computers than its Apple
get windows on your mac
Under Windows I believe the only file system with full support for this is NTFS. On the Mac its standard HFS+ file system has always supported this. On Unix and Linux all native file systems supported this.
The question mark's appearance on a Mac file indicates that the Mac is unable to locate the System software that it needs to open that file.
File Systems supported by Mac OS X:Local File Systems HFSHFS+ISO9660MSDOSNTFSUDFUFSNetwork File Systems AFPFTPNFSSMB/CIFSWebDAVOther deadfsdevfsfdescfifofsloopnullfsramfsspecfssynthfsunionvolfs
Mac OS Extended Journaled
Built in file system manager on Mac OS. Think of it as of the Windows Explorer on Mac.
Log files The encrypting file system EFS Disk quotas
A autorun.inf file is component of the Windows operating system and has no relevance on a Mac.
You can open a mpg file with Windows Media Player. The file can also be opened in Windows Movie Maker as well. Of course, you can't open it with a Mac OS unless you convert the file to a format used by the Mac system though.
The CUR file extension is only used by Microsoft's Windows operating system for cursor images.
Most peripherals will work with both a Windows system and a Mac system. Mac OS X has built in support for most popular printers, scanners, cameras etc. Most name manufacturers provide Mac software for their peripherals if there is no built in support.
FAT 16 file system support 2GB partion.