Steve, just press control-home to go to your home page.

Teresa

Slow down; you’ll get there faster.

On Jun 6, 2014, at 10:34 AM, Steve Holmes <steve.holme...@gmail.com> wrote:

> I like the article detailing how to build a bootable image but the damn site 
> started up autoplaying other videos. How the hell do I stop them? It’s still 
> babbling away while I’m writing this mail. I can close the window of Safari 
> byt then I can’t read the article. I hate auto play. I can’t find any 
> controls to stop the playback. This just sucks!
> 
> On Jun 6, 2014, at 9:25 AM, Tim Kilburn <kilbu...@me.com> wrote:
> 
>> Hi Alex,
>> 
>> Yes, I’m saying that you should totally wipe the HD.  That is, after 
>> starting up from the thumb drive, go to Disk Utility and re-partition your 
>> drive to one partition named Macintosh HD.  Any subsequent partitions should 
>> be done later on the live drive.  This will ensure that the Recovery 
>> Partition is created properly.  Not sure where the other individual got 
>> there info but this is sound practice.  If you used DiskMaker X to create 
>> your bootable Mavericks Installer, on the thumb drive or the built-in 
>> “Create Install Media” utility of the Mavericks Installer, then a proper 
>> Recovery Partition will be automatically created.  If you used the Disk 
>> Utility method, then the Recovery Partition must have already existed in 
>> order to create a proper installation.  The problem in your case is that you 
>> need to do a total re-format, so, using the existing Recovery Partition is 
>> not of any benefit.  Refer to
>> 
>> http://www.macworld.com/article/2056561/how-to-make-a-bootable-mavericks-install-drive.html
>> 
>> for info on these limitations.  In addition, if you didn’t perform a 
>> complete wipe during your last clean install, these errors may have carried 
>> over thus any disk structure issues would have persisted.
>> 
>> Hope this makes sense.
>> 
>> Later…
>> 
>> Tim Kilburn
>> Fort McMurray, AB Canada
>> 
>> On Jun 6, 2014, at 9:34 AM, Alex Hall <mehg...@icloud.com> wrote:
>> 
>>> Thanks. I’m in the beta partition now, copying a few files over to my 
>>> external hard drive. The problem is here too: Finder just hung for about 
>>> thirty seconds, while my Mac’s HD made the sound I’ve come to dread. Still, 
>>> it’s working, thankfully; my main partition won’t even boot.
>>> 
>>> As to wiping, I’m still not sure what to do. I mean, I know how to format 
>>> the drive from the OS X on my thumb drive and then install, the question 
>>> is, what do I do with my partitions? I have two, one Macintosh HD and one 
>>> OS X Beta Partition. When I did a clean install back in March, I had only 
>>> the Macintosh HD partition and so didn’t need to worry. I reformatted that 
>>> partition, but didn’t actually erase it, as people I asked told me that 
>>> completely erasing the Macintosh HD partition could turn out badly. Are you 
>>> saying that I should format the entire drive, wiping out both partitions? 
>>> If I do that, won’t it affect the installation of the OS, or will the 
>>> installer partition as necessary?
>>> On Jun 6, 2014, at 12:43 AM, Tim Kilburn <kilbu...@me.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Hi,
>>>> 
>>>> For expediency purposes, I wouldn’t worry about re-mapping partitions 
>>>> etc., you’re just going to wipe the drive and re-partition anyway.  
>>>> Regarding grabbing those files, if you startup from your thumb drive, then 
>>>> go under it’s Apple menu to Startup Disk, you should be able to select the 
>>>> 10.9.3 beta partition as your startup disk.  if things are OK in that area 
>>>> of the HD.  Once you’ve started with that version of the OS, you could 
>>>> quickly get the files you want and place them onto whatever media you 
>>>> want.  You could then go ahead and do the total wipe/re-partition and 
>>>> re-install from your 10.9.3 thumb drive.  It’s best to do it from there 
>>>> since it needs to be done from a external source in order to completely 
>>>> reformat the drive.
>>>> 
>>>> If you’re unable to startup from your beta partition, then the drive is in 
>>>> fairly rough shape and you’d either need to use Terminal commands to grab 
>>>> those files or just give up on them.
>>>> 
>>>> HTH.
>>>> 
>>>> Later…
>>>> 
>>>> Tim Kilburn
>>>> Fort McMurray, AB Canada
>>>> 
>>>> On Jun 5, 2014, at 9:51 PM, Alex Hall <mehg...@icloud.com> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> Thanks guys. I have a thumb drive with Mavericsk that I’ve used before, 
>>>>> and that I keep around now that we have a couple Macs in the house. I’ll 
>>>>> use that. Before I do though, is there any way to copy off any other 
>>>>> files I’d like to keep, ones I could recover but that it’d be easier just 
>>>>> to have if I can get them? I could probably boot into that beta partition 
>>>>> and copy, but I don’t know if I’ll have the permissions to do that. I’ll 
>>>>> also need a way to erase the beta partition, if that is indeed the 
>>>>> problem. I only tested one OS, the 10.9.3 beta a month ago, but I suppose 
>>>>> it could have caused the problem. Anyway, can I erase that from Disk 
>>>>> Utility on the recovery HD, and if so, how would I do that and merge its 
>>>>> space back to Macintosh HD?
>>>>> On Jun 5, 2014, at 11:11 PM, Tim Kilburn <kilbu...@me.com> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>>> Hi,
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> I agree with Chris that it could very likely be a software thing.  So, 
>>>>>> since you have a Time Machine backup that is fairly up-to-date and you 
>>>>>> say that you have your important files backed up, I’d go for the 
>>>>>> reformat and reinstall option.  If you don’t have an external HD or the 
>>>>>> cables that I mentioned earlier, there is a neat little utility within 
>>>>>> the Mavericks Installer that allows you to build a bootable Mavericks 
>>>>>> installer on a flash drive that is at least 8 GB in size.  If you wish 
>>>>>> to go that way, I can share instructions with you.
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Later…
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> Tim Kilburn
>>>>>> Fort McMurray, AB Canada
>>>>>> 
>>>>>> On Jun 5, 2014, at 9:00 PM, 'Chris Blouch' via MacVisionaries 
>>>>>> <macvisionaries@googlegroups.com> wrote:
>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> You mentioned a 50GB partition for OSX betas. So were you running beta 
>>>>>>> OSes on this box? If so, it's at least plausible that the beta OSX had 
>>>>>>> some kind of bug which mangled data structures on the drive and, since 
>>>>>>> it had access to your non-beta partition, it could have mangled your 
>>>>>>> regular OSX boot drive as well. In other words, this could still have 
>>>>>>> been a software issue.
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> CB
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> On 6/5/14, 9:17 PM, Alex Hall wrote:
>>>>>>>> Hi all,
>>>>>>>> So, here's the status of my Mac Mini's hard drive.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> * Two repairs from the Recovery HD resulted in an error telling me to 
>>>>>>>> format ad re-install.
>>>>>>>> * I did just that at the end of March, and given that two repairs 
>>>>>>>> couldn't fix whatever errors have accumulated after three months, it 
>>>>>>>> seems like the drive itself is having problems.
>>>>>>>> * The SMART status of the drive is "verified", not "failing", which 
>>>>>>>> seems odd given the previous points.
>>>>>>>> * The drive is partitioned into two: 450gb for OS X, and 50gb for OS X 
>>>>>>>> betas. I don't yet know if the beta partition works, but both share a 
>>>>>>>> drive so I'm not optimistic.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>>> Any ideas? I looked at replacing the drive, but the iFixIt 
>>>>>>>> instructions are scary and require special tools. The Mini is not 
>>>>>>>> under Apple Care protection, and my nearest Genius bar is almost three 
>>>>>>>> hours away. Am I just doomed, or is there a check/repair/miracle 
>>>>>>>> program I could run? Any suggestions are appreciated.
>>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> 
>>>>>>> -- 
>>>>>>> ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
>>>>>>> 
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