![]() The second encouraging sign was that DiskWarrior’s Rebuild button was available. Eventually DiskWarrior appeared on its screen with its first encouraging sign - it not only recognized my internal startup disk, but unlike Disk Utility, it recognized it by its name, Boots. I decided to throw one last “ Hail Mary” pass. At this point, I could have erased my recalcitrant boot disk and restored it from my Time Machine backup. ![]() And while it could see my startup disk, the disk appeared as Untitled rather than its name, Boots, which is never a good sign. I had no trouble booting from an external hard disk, which led me to believe something bad had happened to my internal startup disk but that my Mac itself was fine. I performed all my usual tricks: disconnecting all peripherals, clearing the PRAM, checking cables, booting from a different hard disk and so on.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |