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#1
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| Is it possible to hide certain partitions from finder? I would like to hide a few partitions on my hard drive so I don't see them in the sidebar in finder. Is there anyway to do this?
__________________ Mac Pro [2 GHz Quad Xeon, 3 GB RAM, 3 x 250 GB drives] MacBook [2 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 2 GB RAM, 80 GB drive] |
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#2
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| Howabout just dragging them out of the sidebar?
__________________ Power Macintosh G4/500MHz "Yikes!" 10.4.11 Server • 1024MB • 3 x 120GB + 320GB • DVR-111D • 2 x Radeon 7000 PCI • 2 x 17" CRT MacBook 2.0GHz Core 2 Duo - White 10.5.5 • 2048MB • 80GB • CD-RW/DVD-ROM iPod Photo 60GB • iPod nano 1GB • AT&T DSL 6Mb/768k http://www.jeffhoppe.com |
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#3
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| Partitioning is a waste of time (unless you're a developer) and causes more headaches than it's worth.
__________________ This is a computer-generated message and needs no signature. |
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#4
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| Quote:
For example, you might partition your computer's hard disk so that you can use one volume as your startup disk with your applications and working files, and the other as a place to back up or archive files.
__________________ find / -name 'nancy pelosi' -exec rm {} ; rm -rf /System/Library/StartupItems/"${1}" stockholm syndrome |
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#5
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| A partition used as a backup or archive is a pretty bad idea. Hard drive goes bad, all is gone.
__________________ |
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#6
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| Quote:
"For example, you might partition your computer's hard disk so that you can use one volume as your startup disk with your applications and working files, and the other as a place to back up or archive files." directly from an Apple knowledge base article. There are many other good and acceptable reasons to partition a hard drive - which was the point i was trying to make.
__________________ find / -name 'nancy pelosi' -exec rm {} ; rm -rf /System/Library/StartupItems/"${1}" stockholm syndrome |
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#7
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| There is really not any logic in this. Its kind of like buying several one drawer file cabinets, stacking them on top of one another, then bolting them together to form a large cabinet. What is the point? If one drawer catches on fire, they all will burn. Partitions are really only good for seperating operating systems and the like. But like Bob says, once the drive goes, it takes all the partions with it. |
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#8
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| From my time in the darkside I remembered a rule: when you partition e.g. a 80GB drive into 4 seperate 20GB partitions, c:, d:, e: and f: the c partition will be the outer ring of the disk platter and have a higher through put as opposed to the f: partition. However, I would always keep at least 2 paritions on one disk since I don't have a firewire drive but only a network fileserver. Just few days ago when I changed my panther system into tiger I enjoyed emptying one partition, erase - install tiger and set it up while my panther partition was fully functional. This is worth to take this admittedly not so logical step.
__________________ iBook 600; 12''; 640mb; 8mb Rage; DVD-CDRW-Combo, 20GB P4 1.6; 2x80GB Raid1 (file-server) tiBook 1Ghz, Superdrive, 768MB, 64mb 9000, 60GB |
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