You can also use the Disk Utility(my preference). It offers a "Safe Removal"
option
which actually turns the power off to the device.
- "Adam Miller" wrote:
> On Tue, May 17, 2011 at 11:19:28PM -0700, Rob Healey wrote:
> > Greetings:
> >
> > I remember that in the old Gnome 2.x, you coul
On Tue, May 17, 2011 at 11:19:28PM -0700, Rob Healey wrote:
> Greetings:
>
> I remember that in the old Gnome 2.x, you could pull in a usb hard drive and
> the icon would show on the desktop...
>
> To safely remove the device, you could right click the icon, and choose
> "Safety remove..."
>
> I
On 05/18/2011 04:02 PM, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
>
> On Wed May 18 08:55:52 UTC 2011 Rahul Sundaram wrote:
>> In addition to that, gnome-shell-extensions-drive-menu (in Fedora 15 repo)
>> can be useful here.
> Can you elaborate this, Rahul, please?
>
> yum search gnome-shell-extension gives to me o
On 05/18/2011 11:56 AM, Adam Williamson wrote:
> On Tue, 2011-05-17 at 23:19 -0700, Rob Healey wrote:
>> Can someone tell me how to handle this situation the correct gnome3
>> way?
> There's an 'eject' button next to it in the file manager, which more or
> less does this (it actually does something
On 05/18/2011 07:19 AM, Rob Healey wrote:
> Greetings:
>
> I remember that in the old Gnome 2.x, you could pull in a usb hard drive
> and the icon would show on the desktop...
>
> To safely remove the device, you could right click the icon, and choose
> "Safety remove..."
>
> In the new and awesome
On Tue, 2011-05-17 at 23:19 -0700, Rob Healey wrote:
> Greetings:
>
> I remember that in the old Gnome 2.x, you could pull in a usb hard
> drive and the icon would show on the desktop...
>
> To safely remove the device, you could right click the icon, and
> choose "Safety remove..."
>
> In the n