Thanks, John. Exactly what I needed. I know exactly the dialog you are talking
about as I had to remove two items which showed up as running at startup, but
which I had uninstalled.
Thanks.
On Feb 14, 2012, at 3:45 PM, John Panarese wrote:
> Hi Paul,
>
>OK, this is in System preferences.
Hi Paul,
OK, this is in System preferences. Start there.
1. Choose, Users and Groups
2. Choose your account.
3. Choose the login tab
4. Navigate to the table of applications that will run at startup.
5. Navigate to the, Add, button, and VO-space on it.
6. When the dialog opens, navigate to t
John. I'm not seeing any sidebar. The only add button I'm seeing after doing a
command K is the add favorite server button.
And there is no sidebar there.
Where are you seeing the add button? Can you give me the steps starting from
the desktop?
Thanks.
On Feb 14, 2012, at 3:08 PM, John Panarese
Thanks, John. This is great.
On Feb 14, 2012, at 3:08 PM, John Panarese wrote:
>Yes, you have to press the, VO-space, on the, add button. When the dialog
> opens, go to the sidebar and select your network drive. Then, from the file
> list, select the actual volume or volumes you want to m
Yes, you have to press the, VO-space, on the, add button. When the dialog
opens, go to the sidebar and select your network drive. Then, from the file
list, select the actual volume or volumes you want to mount at start up. It's
just like adding an application to your startup items. YOu d
Thanks for that. The recent servers menu button helped since I couldn't
remember the exact name of the drive.
One more thing, though. Is there any way to get the drive to mount
automatically so I don't have to press command K?
At least one keystroke is better than seven or eight; but is there a w
Hi, John. I know where that area is, but I see nothing there that lets me add
the external drive. I see where you can have various startup items. I see an
add button. Does clicking add give a list where i could pick this drive?
On Feb 14, 2012, at 11:06 AM, John Panarese wrote:
> Yes, you can
Awesome. Thanks a lot for this great tip.
Best regards:
Søren Jensen
Mail & MSN:
s...@coolfortheblind.dk
Website:
http://www.coolfortheblind.dk/
Den 14/02/2012 kl. 20.06 skrev John Panarese:
> Yes, you can do this in the login items tab in your account settings in
> Users and Groups and System
Yes, you can do this in the login items tab in your account settings in
Users and Groups and System preferences. Make sure you mount the desired
volumes first and then add them as you would if you wanted an application to
startup with the system. I have done this and it works like a charm.
Hi.
This is a very annoying known issue in Lion. I don't remember what Apple scrued
up but they broke some of the protocols which cause this issue. The easiest
thing you can do is press command k in Finder, and type the following: smb://
and then the name on your network drive.
Here is an exampl
Hi. Is there a way to mount my network drive connected to my apple router
whenever I boot my system?
Right now, I have to go into the finder sidebar and mount it so it shows up on
my desktop.
Once I do that, it remains on the desktop until the next time i boot up.
Thanks.
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