- Sun Mar 28, 2010 12:05 am
#12092
Mac OS X has a habit of creating files when it first mounts an external drive. Portable recorders look like hard drives to the OS, so they are affected too.
The main problem is that, if you use the Finder to browse files on the recorder and copy them around, when you delete a file on the recorder, it is not physically deleted. Instead, OS X moves the file into a .Trashes directory. This results in the space for the deleted file not being reclaimed unless you empty the trash while the recorder is connected. Eventually, you will run out of space on the device, even with all recordings deleted.
Another problem is that OS X by default indexes the drive for Spotlight searches, and it creates a log file for file system events; these files unnecessarily consume space on the flash card.
Here is an article that explains how to stop OS X from doing this. If you use your recorder with OS X, I recommend to follow the advice given there.
In addition, you will probably want to disable Time Machine backups of the recorder's contents. You can do this by entering Time Machine while the recorder is connected and adding the recorder volume to the list of things not to back up in the Options dialog.
If you don't know how to follow the advice in the article, send me a PM and I'll drop you a script that does the job for you.
Cheers,
Michi.
The main problem is that, if you use the Finder to browse files on the recorder and copy them around, when you delete a file on the recorder, it is not physically deleted. Instead, OS X moves the file into a .Trashes directory. This results in the space for the deleted file not being reclaimed unless you empty the trash while the recorder is connected. Eventually, you will run out of space on the device, even with all recordings deleted.
Another problem is that OS X by default indexes the drive for Spotlight searches, and it creates a log file for file system events; these files unnecessarily consume space on the flash card.
Here is an article that explains how to stop OS X from doing this. If you use your recorder with OS X, I recommend to follow the advice given there.
In addition, you will probably want to disable Time Machine backups of the recorder's contents. You can do this by entering Time Machine while the recorder is connected and adding the recorder volume to the list of things not to back up in the Options dialog.
If you don't know how to follow the advice in the article, send me a PM and I'll drop you a script that does the job for you.
Cheers,
Michi.

