Have you got any encrypted HFS+ disks you still back up to, or tucked away in storage? Now is the time to plan what to do with them. Here is a guide with practical suggestions.
Have you got any encrypted HFS+ disks you still back up to, or tucked away in storage? Now is the time to plan what to do with them. Here is a guide with practical suggestions.
Apple has announced that support for HFS+ encryption will be removed in a future version of macOS. How this is all about ending support for CoreStorage, and where it has gone since then.
Eight BSD flags are available in APFS to lock files, hide them, and restrict them in other ways. None of them synced correctly in iCloud Drive, and four caused other problems.
Welcome to another edition of “This month in KDE Linux” — KDE’s in-progress operating system.
This month we completed a major infrastructure project. Previously, our build process was generating Arch packages for KDE software and having mkosi install them; Hadi Chokr ported this to use KDE’s kde-builder tool to compile all KDE software directly. This change brings three…
How to use the Finder's Lock feature, and as the Immutable flag in Terminal. What its effects are, and how well it's retained. How iCloud Drive can't cope with it, and how you can use it in your own lightweight versioning system.
You're in a rush, and need to disconnect your MacBook Pro's external drive. But when you try to eject it, one or more programs may be using it. What do you do next?
Demonstrated 10 years ago as a major new feature in APFS, and capable of blazingly fast rollback preserving data including document versions, snapshots still aren't fully accessible or documented.
Introduced in Mac OS X 10.4 to extend resource forks, they have flourished since. Explains their storage, how they persist or don't, with an appendix explaining their flags.
If you've installed the new Creator Studio versions of Keynote, Numbers and Pages you'll have noticed those apps have the same name as the iWork ones, and can sit side-by-side with them. What trickery was used to do this?
Should you attempt a repair in Recovery mode? Is it just a warning? How to identify the file or folder with a problem, and what to do to fix or prevent it from recurring.
If you've upgraded to Tahoe, your Time Capsule should still back up normally. But erase it to start new backups, and Time Machine refuses to back up to it any more.