Malcolm Hamilton
January 19th, 2012, 10:02 AM
Hi all,
I'm on a shoot in Yellowknife (and surviving the cold, thank you to those who posted with suggestions for keeping my EX1 from fogging up!; my fingers froze though), and thought I'd post a quick note about DiskWarrior, which saved me much grief last night.
(I have no connection whatsoever to the company, by the way).
For reasons that are completely beyond me—all I can say is that no matter how dependable a computer is, it can still do odd things for no apparent reason—when I popped the first of two veryfull SxS cards (one 32GB, the other 64GB) into the ExpressCard slot of my MacBook Pro last night, to copy footage off, the card didn't appear on my desktop, as it ALWAYS has in the past.
I popped the card out, and in again, to no avail.
I fixed my permissions with Disk Utility and restarted. Nothing... the card was still not appearing on the desktop.
I was starting to count my remaining (16GB) cards to calculate whether I'd be able to get by (I'm close to the end of my shoot, but not finished), but then I remembered that I have a DiskWarrior bootable DVD in my laptop case. So I ran DiskWarrior and then rebooted, and voila, the SxS card appeared on my desktop properly.
So... I've kept this DVD in my laptop case for years without ever needing to use it. But I used it last night and it saved me a lot of grief.
I'm posting because I think that having a strategy like this to save your ExpressCard slot functionality (if that's what it was) is just as important as having a plan to keep your lens from fogging up!
Regards,
Malcolm
I'm on a shoot in Yellowknife (and surviving the cold, thank you to those who posted with suggestions for keeping my EX1 from fogging up!; my fingers froze though), and thought I'd post a quick note about DiskWarrior, which saved me much grief last night.
(I have no connection whatsoever to the company, by the way).
For reasons that are completely beyond me—all I can say is that no matter how dependable a computer is, it can still do odd things for no apparent reason—when I popped the first of two veryfull SxS cards (one 32GB, the other 64GB) into the ExpressCard slot of my MacBook Pro last night, to copy footage off, the card didn't appear on my desktop, as it ALWAYS has in the past.
I popped the card out, and in again, to no avail.
I fixed my permissions with Disk Utility and restarted. Nothing... the card was still not appearing on the desktop.
I was starting to count my remaining (16GB) cards to calculate whether I'd be able to get by (I'm close to the end of my shoot, but not finished), but then I remembered that I have a DiskWarrior bootable DVD in my laptop case. So I ran DiskWarrior and then rebooted, and voila, the SxS card appeared on my desktop properly.
So... I've kept this DVD in my laptop case for years without ever needing to use it. But I used it last night and it saved me a lot of grief.
I'm posting because I think that having a strategy like this to save your ExpressCard slot functionality (if that's what it was) is just as important as having a plan to keep your lens from fogging up!
Regards,
Malcolm