The Samsung hard drive says that it is suitable for Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard, Mac OS X 10.7 Lion, Mac OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks.
That just means you can electrically plug it in and it will communicate at the hardware level. That does not mean every file system format ever created can be used with every other computer.
OS X prefers HFS+ (Mac OS Extended Journaled), and knows how to read/write FAT, FAT32, exFAT, and OS X can read NTFS. But there are a world of other file system formats out there that can live on that Samsung disk (I know, I've maintained and helped develop some of those file systems), but that does not mean Window, or OS X, or Solaris, or Linux, or AIX, or OpenVMS, or Tru64 UNIX, or HP-UX, or FreeBSD, or GNU/Hurd, etc... has drivers to read and write every file system format ever developed.
Again, Google search "OS X write NTFS", and you will find some suggestions.
Another approach is to just access the Windows formatted NTFS disk over the network letting Windows offer the disk as a Share that the Mac connects to.