hard drive

Is Your Hard Drive Filling Up?

If your hard drive is getting full, it is recommended by some to keep at least 20GB of free space on your hard drive. The main reason for this is to be able to have enough room to do another upgrade of the operating system. Each new upgrade requires a minimum of about 6 GB of space just to download the file, and some additional free space is needed for the final installation. A full hard drive does NOT mean your Mac will run slow, but it could also be that the files on the drive are not optimized and/or contiguous. 

John R. Carter, Sr.

Restore Lost Photos, Documents, Archives!

         The slogan, "It simply works!" grabs our attention.  Who hasn't accidentally lost photos or videos, documents, or archives from a hard disk or even from a digital camera memory?
        John Carter has recovered thousands of files from flash drives that anyone might say there was no way anything could be left on it to recover. A companion program that comes with Photorec is Testdisk. Testdisk claims to be able to restore a damaged hard drive. Access the full PDF article in the Reviews page here  on the PMUG website.  John includes detailed instructions on how to use the program.  Click on the Command + to enlarge the small illustrations. 

How Long Will SSD Drives Last?

        "Here's an interesting article speculating on a 'bleak' future for SSD drives. The article assumes that SSD cells will continue to shrink in size, from the present 25nm to perhaps 6.5nm in 2024, with an inherent increase in errors.  There's some interesting comments following the article you might also take a look at."  
        After pointing us to this article, Jim Hamm goes on to give some personal information and opinion.  "I've got two laptops with SSD drives (a MacBook Air and a ThinkPad), and I certainly like them -- not necessarily because they're faster than a spinning drive -- but because I don't have to worry about 'jiggling' the computers when moving them around, and SSDs make for good traveling computers.
        "I've never had a problem with a spinning drive on any of the computers I've owned, and I think they're fine. In fact, I recently bought a nine-year-old iMac G4, which has seen a lot of use, and still works well, albeit slower, with a spinning drive.  Why did I do this? I like the looks of the iMac G4, and compare the idea to someone buying a '57 Chevy. May not make practical sense, but conceptually/emotionally satisfying."

Prevent a Hard Drive Catastrophe (updated 8/26/2015)

John Carter to the rescue!  This article on protecting your Mac against a catastrophic hard drive failure is still worth looking at. John refers to Macworld Hints as "THE place to look for tips and techniques about the Mac. However, you can spend a whole lot of time filtering through the thousands of submitted articles and comments to get a concise answer for your question. You might find just what you’re looking for or you might feel like you’re wasting your time. "For example, I did a search for 'time machine backup' (using the advanced search and searching titles only) and got 516 hits, the first 14 were comments and the rest were hints about different aspects of using Time Machine in connection with backups." John advises, "One of the best hints is 'Make a Bootable Backup.'  This is one way to protect yourself against a catastrophic hard drive failure, but it doesn’t give you the option to boot up from an external hard drive and continue using the Time Machine disk for backups." So, read how to do it, and then do it.  It's easy and it's logical.

How Long Will My Drive Last?

What about your hard drive?  Jim Hamm is concerned, and he shares his ideas, "Here is an article talking about how long the hard drive will last in your computer. Answer: about 3 years or so. The author said he talked to a 'drive' engineer whether it's better to leave the drive running all the time, or turning the computer off at night. According to the article, it doesn't seem to matter. I don't know 'beans' about drives, but it seems to me that something spinning all the time at 5400 rpm or so has got to wear out faster than if one shuts the computer down for several hours a day. But, who knows? I wonder what Apple might have to say about this question?

"I turn my Mac off each evening and start it up again in the morning. The article states there is wear and tear on the bearing doing that, which apparently negates the benefit of shutting it off. Still, I feel better using this procedure. My MacBook Pro is four years old now, so I'm listening for any 'grinding' noises which will probably indicate imminent failure. Sheesh!"

Hard Drive Getting Full?

If your Mac hard drive is getting full John Carter has a solution.  Consider that you may be filling up one or more of the following folders:   Movies  --  Pictures -- Documents  --  Downloads
John walks us through the steps as follows . . . and we quote:

It is easy to recover a lot of space just by adding an external drive and moving the folders from the internal drive to the external drive, and then creating a symbolic link from the external drive folder back to the internal drive. This could work equally well even if you have a laptop. For laptops, I recommend the Western Digital Passport - whatever size suits you - because they are compact and carry well. An alternative would be to purchase a 3.5" Seagate or Maxtor drive and install it in a 3.5" external case, and this might be cheaper than a Passport drive of the same capacity.

Now for the detail.  To move a folder from one location to another, you could simply use Finder to drag the existing folder to an external drive. A preferred alternative (more reliable) would be to use a command line in a Terminal:

$ sudo ditto <source_folder/> <destination_folder/> 

Only the contents of the source folder are copied, including all subfolders. If the destination folder does not exist, it will be created, and the contents of the source folder are copied into the destination folder.

Example:

$ sudo ditto /Users/jcarter/Movies /VolumesMac1_HD2/Movies

Next, you need to delete the source folder and create a link from the destination folder to where the source folder was. This has to be done in a Terminal:

$ rm -rf /Users/jcarter/Movies
$ ln -s /Volumes/Mac1_HD2/Movies /Users/jcarter/Movies

The symbolic link (specified as symbolic by the -s option) /Users/jcarter/Movies is not a folder. It is a file that pretends to be a folder. When you look at it with the Finder you actually see the contents of /Volumes/Mac1_HD2/Movies. If you use a command in Terminal to look at it you will see:

$ ls /Users/jcarter/Movies
/Users/jcarter/Movies@

At this point, although not essential, you should log out and log back in. As far as the applications that access the Movies folder are concerned, the folder is still there.

The result is you have just recovered a lot of disc space on your internal drive.

Now, if you did not have the external drive attached and powered up and tried to access something in the Movies folder with, say, iMovie, iMovie will still work but you'll have to specify a new path to work in. Not a good idea, because then you'll have multiple locations for your movies.

If you moved "iPhoto Library" to an external hard drive and the drive was not attached or powered on, iPhoto will ask to you specify a new location for your photos. Again, this is a bad idea because the new location will override the old one and it will appear as though you can't access those old photos. Never fear. You can always tell iPhoto to look in any location for photos at the time you start up iPhoto by holding down the Option key when you launch iPhoto. That brings up the menu to specify the location to look in before bringing up the application. Just be sure you specify an actual iPhoto Library path.

After moving my iPhoto Library to an external drive, I looked at the available paths for iPhoto and discovered the following:

The default location points to the original path:

The next location points to another user login on the Mac:

And the last location points to the actual path on the external hard drive:

And, here John closes off with, "May your days be merry and bright."