Hard Drive transplant woes

I bought a 2011 Macbook Pro and put my old HD (from a 2008 macbook) in and booted it - successfully. The problem is that Logic and some other software are demanding license information again. Why? Shouldn't everything just work as before?

You could install the original HD back into your MBP and move your data across from your old MB drive using Migration Assistant.
Migration Assistant will make sure your licensing information is placed in the correct directories.

Similar Messages

  • HP 8300 Elite SFF Hard Drive Transplant

    I am currently using an HP Elite 8200 SFF, and have two hard drives set up with all software working properly. I would rather avoid having to do this all over again if I can!
    I have just taken delivery of a new 8300 Elite SFF, and would like to transplant the two HDD's from the 8200, (and will do a fresh install on the 8200 on the HDD currently in the  8300).
    Both are running Windows 7 Professional x64.
    Is this likely to be a problem?
    Nigel.
    This question was solved.
    View Solution.

    You're very welcome, Nigel.
    If you want to go thru with the attempt, here is what you need to do:
    On the 8200 Elite...
    Download these files (first download is what you want). Extract them to a folder where you will browse to them later.
    http://downloadcenter.intel.com/Detail_Desc.aspx?a​gr=Y&ProdId=3449&DwnldID=22194&keyword=Intel+Rapid​...
    Then go to the device manager and click on the IDE ATA/ATAPI controllers section.
    Click on the Intel Desktop/Workstation SATA AHCI controller. Click on the driver tab. Click on Update Driver.
    Select the Browse My Computer for Driver Software.
    Click on the Let Me Pick a List of Device Drivers on my computer.
    Click on the Have Disk button. 
    Browse to where you saved the driver files you just downloaded and select the Intel(R) 7 Series/C216 Chipset Family SATA AHCI Controller from the list.
    Follow the rest of the prompts and the driver should install. Now don't reboot. Shut down the PC and install the drive in the 8300, and hope it boots up.
    If not, then you will have to reinstall W7.
    Paul

  • Hard drive transplant

    hello,
    i'm interested in buying an Apple PowerMac G4 (digital audio) 533MHz with a 40 GB PATA hard drive on ebay. i'd like to pull the 20 GB ATA master hard drive from my current G4 AGP 400 MHz and add it to the digial audio version to give me two hard drives. my current machine has two 20GB ATA hard drives stacked. can i stack the 20GB ATA on top of the 40GB PATA? like to know if there will be problems before i commit to buying.
    your humble novice,
    paul

    Hi-
    Shouldn't be a problem at all.
    Just remember to jumper the drives Master/Slave.
    The way the IDE cable connectors are, the Master is the end connector (for the lower drive) and the middle connector is for the Slave (the upper drive).

  • DV9428NR hard drive upgrade woes

    Why is it impossible to successfully and functionally change and upgrade the secondary HDD on the DV9428NR?  I tried for two days, Geek Squad tried for two days and a local computer repair shop tried for two days to do a simple HDD upgrade on this particular model and nobody was sucessful.  This is a bone stock laptop that has been repaired only at HP twice for the motherboard.  It has two 120 GB HDD's.  I was trying to upgrade the secondary drive (D:data) to a 320GB HDD.  Is this a common issue and what are my options?

    Hey wishforbiggerhd, 
    I'm sorry you're running into this upgrade issue. Are you getting error messages? If so, what do they say? Does the Windows reinstall get stuck at some point? Did you format both of the drives as dynamic rather than basic?

  • T43 Hard Drive Upgrade Woes...

    I recently purchased a Fujitsu MHV2120AT 120GB HDD to replace the Toshiba 40GB HDD in my T43.
    From the looks of things, this drive should be supported with a firmware update, avoiding the dreaded 2010 error at startup. "MHV2xxxAT" is listed as "supported in this update" on the firmware update page. Yet, when I run the firmware update utility, it tells me there's nothing to update.
    Perhaps there's a way to manually update to the correct firmware without using the utility?
    The HDD works. I've installed XP Pro SP3 on it and everything runs fine. But the error message is mildly annoying and I would like it to go away. And no, I have no interest in downgrading the BIOs to an ancient version to avoid the error message.
    Also, what exactly is it that won't work if the HDD doesn't have the right firmware? The active protection system I'm guessing? I guess I can live without that if I must.  

    Personally, I've had absolutely zero luck updating firmware on any supposedly "supported" drive...
    Regarding the date...I've had IBM-branded Hitachi drives  with older production dates (2003/4) throw error on T43s although they shouldn't...I don't know what the catch is, but there's got to be one...
    I've installed dozens of Fujitsu drives on T43s, no error incured, ever. Meanwhile, quite a few people have had the same experience as you...
    Cheers,
    George
    In daily use: R60F, R500F, T61, T410
    Collecting dust: T60
    Enjoying retirement: A31p, T42p,
    Non-ThinkPads: Panasonic CF-31 & CF-52, HP 8760W
    Starting Thursday, 08/14/2014 I'll be away from the forums until further notice. Please do NOT send private messages since I won't be able to read them. Thank you.

  • Hp Warranty Woes & Hard Drive Heartache

    HP – Warranties Woes & Hard Drive Headaches.
    Dear Internet Community (I.C)
    I need your help.
    I would like to know if I’m being unreasonable in my expectations or is Hewlett Packard (HP) not living up to its both moral & legal obligations as a good corporate citizen & what it alleges to be – a Customer Focused Global Computer Services company.
    Apologies if this is a little long winded but in the interests of fairness I need to put as many HP comments in as possible – to give you a clear picture.
    So bear with me, you will not be disappointed & there are a couple of questions you might like to answer & feedback to the appropriate parties.
    Keep in mind at all times we are talking about approximately a $200 (NZD) fix – less than the lost profit on one lost sale for an HP PC ( you might think twice about HP products after reading this).
    There are two parts to this problem :
    Part 1 :
    I purchased an HP Touch Smart a few years ago, I registered the product & warranty with them & over the years have received have received numerous emails stating “buy this, upgrade now”.
    But I don’t recall ever receiving an “WARNING – Critical Failure Issue (CFI) apply attached patch immediately” email while under warranty. Why is this relevant?
    Ø Seagate makes Hard Drives – in this case a Barracuda 7200.11
    Ø HP buys said HD’s from Seagate
    Ø Seagate finds a problem with firmware in HD’s & advises HP & supplies a fix
    Ø HP knows which Customers have these HD’s, because you know what goes into your machines – right ? - see below
    Ø HP FAILS to send email to Customers with the fix (a simple email with attachment would solve problem) or issue recall.
    Ø HP even offers previously to fix problem FOC & puts fix on its Website - but only if the Customer knows somehow of the problem.
    Ø Should the Customer intuitively& telepathically know of problems in HP Products in advance before it fails, because of course HP is not telling their Customers.
    Problem or Outcome: My HD has bricked itself & will not operate as I never received notice of the firmware fix at any time either in or out of warranty.
    Paul Boshoff - G M -Personal Systems Group- HP NZ (PB- GMPSG) says
    “It would be very difficult, if not impossible, for any computer vendor to proactively notify it’s customers of component-level updates”
    “Failures of the kind you’ve experienced are usually related to a specific batch of serial numbers and often those component serial numbers aren’t available when the user is registering that particular computer.”
    Now let me know if you think I’m wrong, but it sounds like HP does not know what goes into its machines or at the very minimum does not keep track of this.
    HP, a Global Computer Services company cannot possibly be expected to track what goes into its machines. HP apparently does not record or match the serial number of the HD with the machine it goes into.
    If Ford & Toyota can track & record what tyres go on which make & model of their cars which are in the millions each year & can recall cars dating back 8-10 years just case of a manufacturers component malfunction why can’t HP link & record the HD details.
    I can just hear it now “I’m sorry we don’t know which engine we put in your car”.
    And let’s be real clear here – we are not talking about some small screw at the back of a PC – Along with the CPU & the RAM, the Hard Drive is pretty much up there in the top 3 of important components of any computer.
    I.C – Do you feel
    ü That fills you with confidence in HP products & services ?
    ü Should HP be required to tell its customer of CFI’s with its products – particularly while under warranty?
    ü Has HP tried to limit their liability & cost by directly NOT telling Customers of CFI’s while under warranty?
    Part 2 :
    When your HD bricks itself – apparently all is not lost – some very clever person has found a solution so you can get the HD going long enough to apply the firmware fix & then your HD is a good as new – Here is the link that spells it out with pics http://www.overclock.net/t/457286/seagate-bricked-firmware-drive-fix-with-pics)
    You’ll see the relevance of this shortly.
    After much messing about I received the following email from PB- GMPSG : “I have escalated your issue and have just received the go-ahead to repair your unit at our cost. We will be utilizing our own, authorized service provider to re-install the original hard-drive and to run the software fix on that unit.” (This guy most likely earns a six figure salary & isn’t able to sign off $200 fix).
    NOTE : it does not limit or restrict what type of fixes will be used & also at this time HP was aware of both the Seagate fix & above fix.
    I delivered the PC & bricked HD into the HP Authorised Repair Centre (ARC) as requested –their ticket instructions read “do firmware update…HP to incur costs. NO COST to customer”.
    Obviously it’s not rocket science but you need the HD going before you can apply any firmware fix including this one – HP knew that to get the HD going they would need a special fix to enable them to apply the Seagate fix.
    After all this is not an isolated case & I did point out to HP that they would need the fix I supplied (or something similar HP approved or designed if that made them more comfortable) prior to their offer of fixing the HD.
    HP said their ARC’s had all the right software for fixing their machines. In addition I have been told on several occasions, the ARC’s are the bee’s knees, the cat pajamas, the whiz kids of the PC service world “The first port of call for the repair centre agent is to download all the latest service advisory notices and updates. This is a very fundamental part of the repair process and one that we spend a great deal of time emphasizing with our authorised repair centres” Keep this in mind.
    A week later I received a call from Peter Gasporaratos, HP CS Melbourne (poor guy – caught in the middle) & stated “there is nothing else we can do for you”. When I asked if they had applied the fix he said “its not our responsibility.. its not part of our guidelines.. the ARC does not practice unauthorised methods..& this ARC will not go down this path”
    Ironically the day before, Barry from the ARC said “we can attempt it, but we will charge you too”. So HP’s own ARC will do it, but there will be a cost – but hang on a minute, didn’t PB- GMPSG say “to repair your unit at our cost. We will be utilizing our own, authorized service provider to re-install the original hard-drive and to run the software fix on that unit” & HP CS put on the instructions “HP to incur costs. NO COST to customer”.
    I.C – Do you feel
    ü HP have said they will fix it at NO COST to me, regardless of what the fix entails ?
    ü Should HP honour this commitment ?
    ü Would you do business with a company that says one thing & does another & does not honour its commitment ?
    ü That given the bricking fault did not need to happen if HP had been proactive in letting their customers know of the firmware issue & this is not an isolated case– shouldn’t they then be responsible in finding or developing a fix for getting the HD going long enough to apply the firmware fix if they are not going to use other recognised fixes.
    Abstract
    So that’s it – what do you think I.C. ?
    Would you want HP computers & servers controlling the Traffic Lights, Air Traffic Control, Patient records & Medications at Hospitals knowing that HP will not tell these organisations that there is CFI with their products & they could suddenly lose everything. All dead while they try to find a back up computer with all the data – god forbid if President Obama’s “football” is powered by an HP – Nuclear War before we know it.
    But seriously – I would love your feedback – Am I being unreasonable in asking them to honour their commitment for a $200 fix ?
    And of course HP being a Customer Focused Global Computer Services company, would welcome your feedback.
    Here are a couple of the players contact details who would love to hear from you :
    ü Keith Watson – CEO –HP NZ -I initially contacted him & he thanked me for bringing it to his attention, then nothing.
    Email : [email protected]
    ü Paul Boshoff - G M -Personal Systems Group- HP NZ – well of course you now know who he is now – he would love feedback.
    Email : [email protected]
    ü Jessica Rangi – She’s the Spokes person/PR/Marketing for HP NZ & has just help launch HP new PC range in NZ – She would love your feedback as it might impact on her marketing & she is quoted as having helped out in warranty situations before & has worked at HP head office.
    Email : [email protected]
    ü Meg Whitman - President and Chief Executive Officer of HP Global
    Email : [email protected]
    They would all like to hear from you J
    I.C
    J Thanks for being patience & reading through to the end – now it’s up to you
    L buy HP Products & Services or not.
    L Do HP deserve your hard earned money if you now believe they aren’t going tell you about problems with their Product & Services.
    Be kind to one another & take care.
    Regards
    Smithie
    P.S - I sent this blog to HP for fact & quote checking prior to uploading (I gave them over a week to reply) – the silence was deafening from HP.

    When requesting assistance, please provide the complete model name and product number of the HP computer in question. HP/Compaq makes thousands of models of computers. Without this information it may be difficult or impossible to assist you in resolving your issue.
    The above requested information can be found on the bottom of your computer or inside the battery compartment. Please do not include your serial number. Please enter the model/product information into HP's Online Consumer Support page and post it here for our review.
    I doubt the hard drive would be covered by buying an extended warranty after the fact. There is also no reason to buy a new hard drive from HP. Almost any 2.5" hard drive on the market will work in your computer. You will need your personal HP Recovery Disc set to return the computer to a factory like state. If you didn't create these discs, you will need to order a set.
    If you have any further questions, please don't hesitate to ask.
    Please click the white KUDOS star to show your appreciation
    Frank
    {------------ Please click the "White Kudos" Thumbs Up to say THANKS for helping.
    Please click the "Accept As Solution" on my post, if my assistance has solved your issue. ------------V
    This is a user supported forum. I am a volunteer and I don't work for HP.
    HP 15t-j100 (on loan from HP)
    HP 13 Split x2 (on loan from HP)
    HP Slate8 Pro (on loan from HP)
    HP a1632x - Windows 7, 4GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6130y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6320y - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240
    HP p7-1026 - Windows 7, 6GB RAM, AMD Radeon HD 6450
    HP p6787c - Windows 7, 8GB RAM, NVIDIA GT 240

  • Hard drive woes ...

    Going a little nuts here. Back in February, I decided that I needed a bigger hard drive. I ordered up a 500GB 5400rpm drive from Other World Computing. They sent me the enclosure kit along with it. I cloned my existing drive, and after cloning I swapped one drive for the other. Everything was fine for a little over a month. I started experiencing freezing and slowdowns while browsing the internet, and then one day while downloading some digital media, everything froze up. I had to turn the machine off to un-freeze it. When I tried to boot again it wouldn't boot.
    I surfed around the internet on another machine and got all kinds of voodoo suggestions for how to get the thing to boot. While I can't recall all of the things that I eventually did, suffice to say I finally got the thing booted but much of my data was scattered into all sorts of folders marked "Lost and Found". It took me weeks to retrieve my most important data. I'm sure I lost some critical stuff, I just haven't attempted to access it yet to discover it isn't there. Of course by now I'm sure you have figured out that I didn't have a backup ... shame on me, and I have (for the most part) learned that hard lesson. I was able to successfully use Data Rescue II to pull all the data off the drive but it took days.
    Well, a couple of weeks after this debacle I experienced the slowdowns again to the point where the information was simply not coming up. The drive had failed. I called up OWC, and after some wrangling they agreed to replace the drive. I installed the new drive and everything worked fine for about 3 weeks. While away on travel, I checked my email one morning at the hotel, put my computer away in my bag and drove 2 minutes to the place I needed to run a seminar on PowerPoint. When I plugged the PowerPoint projector into my machine and woke it up, it froze. This happens about half the time I do this. My solution is always to restart the computer. (I had used this identical projector and computer for two solid days of training before this happened). The computer appeared to start, then flashed a file folder with a question mark symbol in it. It would not boot. Because of the previous shenanigans with this **** thing, I had brought an external USB hard drive with all of my backed up data on it. I can boot from this hard drive and, in fact, I'm typing this question on the problem computer right now. But I can't access the internal drive.
    I attempted to use Disk Utility and it sees the drive and the partition, but it will not allow the partition to mount. When I attempt to use Disk Warrior, it will not register the drive or the partition during a disk scan. I have been running Data Rescue II for the past two days non-stop trying to clone the failed drive to a new external drive. There are times when it will run fast (copying 1 GB every 20-30 seconds) and other times where it slows down so that it copies 256 KB every 20-30 seconds) It has so far cloned 277GB of 465GB. At this rate, it will take about two more days to finish, then I have to figure out if the data is useable. I would have simply cloned my backup drive to the new drive except I had to go out of the country for two weeks, and my external USB backup drive is so bulky and needs an external power supply, so I had two weeks of important work that was not (I know, I know!!!) backed up.
    I contacted OWC again, and they are reluctant to replace the drive. They told me that the first "failed" drive I sent back to them tested out fine, despite the fact that I had actually sent the whole computer into Apple for a service call and Apple told me the drive was fried. Of course they wouldn't do anything about it because it was a third party drive. I took the computer into the Genius Bar for this second failed drive to find out if there were any tech tool programs I could use to find out exactly what was going on with the **** thing, but they again told me that the drive was fried.
    So my ultimate question after that lengthy background, is this: Is my MacBook Pro killing hard drives, or am I getting bad drives from my supplier? What on earth could my computer be doing to kill drives if this is the case? It worked flawlessly and I haven't changed my work or travel habits at all since I started installing these Hitachi drives. I don't have any problems at all when using external drives, but as soon as I install something into the box, tick .... tick ... tick ... it seems to wait for a few weeks, then BAM. drive failure.
    And why on earth would a drive fail in my computer, then work perfectly fine for the techs at OWC when they test out the drive?
    Frustrated beyond belief, and a bit tired of carrying around clunky external hard drives.
    Help!!!!

    Welcome to Apple Discussions!
    This is a very puzzling situation. I don't know if the drives are failing or if the problem lies elsewhere, but there are some things to look at and to try.
    One thing to check is the hard drive flex cable. It needs to be undamaged and well seated on the logic board. If it has a piece of Kapton tape over the logic board connector, the kapton tape should be replaced with a fresh piece.
    There are a couple of things that can go wrong with hard drives. The complex software on them can become corrupted, and this might have happened to yours. The way to repair this is to boot from your system install disc and navigate to Disk Utility and then repair your startup disk, i. e. the internal hard drive. If Disk Utility finds errors it cannot repair, the perhaps a utility like Disk Warrior can. You want to repair the disk until there is nothing left to repair.
    Another way a hard drive can fail is physically, and if this happens, there is no way to repair it. However, there is a utility that will enable you to see the S.M.A.R.T status in considerable detail:
    http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/32454
    If you get specific errors either with Disk Utility or with S.M.A.R.T Utility, you can see if you can capture them with a photo. That would give you something very specific to show OWC as evidence that the drive itself is bad.
    There is also a possibility that the SATA bus is bad and that is causing your problems. However, if that were the case, you would expect the drive to not work from the beginning instead of working for a while and then failing.
    I don't know how the techs at OWC test out their drives, but I do know that S.M.A.R.T. is not supported on external drives.
    Is it possible that this is a software issue? If you have a good backup on an external drive, you could try erasing and reformatting the drive and see if this brings it back to life.
    When the Apple guys said the drive was fried, did they say why?
    One thing you might want to consider until this issue is resolved. Get a 500 GB notebook drive and one of OWC's Mercury on the Go Firewire enclosures with the very reliable Oxford 924+ chipset. I have 2 of these--one with a 320 GB Western Digital Drive and one with a 500 GB Western Digital drive. I use these for backup. They are compact enough to fit in my computer bag and will run off of a firewire port, so no external power supply is needed.
    Also, it may be worth talking to Hitache about your drive if you are having trouble with OWC. It may also be worth considering another brand--you can often get drives at good prices with free shipping from Newegg.
    It does sound like you may have 2 drives that have failed. It's probably worth taking some pictures of the flashing question mark and any other evidence you may have to send back with the drive. It is probably also worth putting it into an enclosure and seeing if it works properly then. If it does, do a very careful check of the flex cable and connections.
    Good luck!

  • External Hard Drive woes (possibly Time Machine related)

    Hello everyone,
    I am using one of the partitions on my WD My Passport for Mac (1 TB) partitioned into two sepaprate partions (both Mac OS Extended Journaled)  of 500 GB each as my backup disk for Time Machine.
    Now, Time Machine seems to work fine on it for some time. However, after a period of time (~5 hours) time machine stops working. Here are the relevant logs.
    2/2/12 5:35:26.221 AM com.apple.backupd: Starting standard backup
    2/2/12 5:35:26.424 AM com.apple.backupd: Backing up to: /Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb
    2/2/12 5:35:27.351 AM com.apple.backupd: 2.52 GB required (including padding), 243.30 GB available
    2/2/12 5:35:39.920 AM com.apple.backupd: Copied 1408 files (49.3 MB) from volume Macintosh HD.
    2/2/12 5:35:40.073 AM com.apple.backupd: 2.46 GB required (including padding), 243.25 GB available
    2/2/12 5:35:43.099 AM com.apple.backupd: Copied 876 files (199 bytes) from volume Macintosh HD.
    2/2/12 5:35:43.631 AM com.apple.backupd: Starting post-backup thinning
    2/2/12 5:35:43.631 AM com.apple.backupd: No post-back up thinning needed: no expired backups exist
    2/2/12 5:35:43.655 AM com.apple.backupd: Backup completed successfully.
    2/2/12 6:35:26.125 AM com.apple.backupd: Starting standard backup
    2/2/12 6:35:26.379 AM com.apple.backupd: Backing up to: /Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb
    2/2/12 6:37:30.081 AM com.apple.backupd: Error: (-50) Creating directory 2012-02-02-063730.inProgress
    2/2/12 6:37:30.081 AM com.apple.backupd: Failed to make snapshot container.
    2/2/12 6:37:43.118 AM com.apple.backupd: Error: (22) setxattr for key:com.apple.backupd.HostUUID path:/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly size:37
    2/2/12 6:37:53.131 AM com.apple.backupd: Backup failed with error: 2
    2/2/12 7:35:25.953 AM com.apple.backupd: Starting standard backup
    2/2/12 7:35:26.129 AM com.apple.backupd: Backing up to: /Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb
    2/2/12 7:35:26.190 AM com.apple.backupd: Error: (22) setxattr for key:com.apple.backupd.HostUUID path:/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly size:37
    2/2/12 7:35:26.192 AM com.apple.backupd: Error: (22) setxattr for key:com.apple.backupd.HostUUID path:/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly size:37
    2/2/12 7:35:36.207 AM com.apple.backupd: Backup failed with error: 2
    2/2/12 8:35:25.847 AM com.apple.backupd: Starting standard backup
    2/2/12 8:35:26.020 AM com.apple.backupd: Backing up to: /Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb
    2/2/12 8:35:26.076 AM com.apple.backupd: Error: (22) setxattr for key:com.apple.backupd.HostUUID path:/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly size:37
    2/2/12 8:35:26.078 AM com.apple.backupd: Error: (22) setxattr for key:com.apple.backupd.HostUUID path:/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly size:37
    2/2/12 8:35:36.091 AM com.apple.backupd: Backup failed with error: 2
    When this happens, the Hard Drive makes beeping noises (each time Time Machine tries to access it). It refuses to unmount, and Disk Utility refuses to either verify or repair the hard drive. Forcibly unplugging the hard drive and replugging it does not help either. It makes beeping noises for about half a minute and then goes quiet. However, neither is it mounted nor is it visible in the disk utility.
    The only way I have managed to fix this is to plug the hard drive in another mac, where it mounts without any problem. I then run disk utility to verify the hard drive (on that mac) and then when I replug the drive to my laptop, it works. Until it breaks again.
    The only other "error" related to my external hard drive that I have found in system logs is also pasted below:
    2/2/12 12:50:07.161 AM com.apple.backupd: Error (256): fetching properties: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=256 "The file “objects.nib” couldn’t be opened." UserInfo=0x7f9097807460 {NSURL=file://localhost/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly/2012-02-01-222347/Macintosh%20HD/System/Library/ColorPickers/NSColorPickerWheel.colorPicker/Resources/ar.lproj/NSColorPickerWheel.nib/objects.nib, NSFilePath=/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly/2012-02-01-222347/Macintosh HD/System/Library/ColorPickers/NSColorPickerWheel.colorPicker/Resources/ar.lproj/NSColorPickerWheel.nib/objects.nib, NSUnderlyingError=0x7f9097833650 "The operation couldn’t be completed. Not a directory"}
    2/2/12 12:50:07.289 AM com.apple.backupd: Error (256): fetching properties: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=256 "The file “objects.nib” couldn’t be opened." UserInfo=0x7f9097096050 {NSURL=file://localhost/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly/2012-02-01-222347/Macintosh%20HD/System/Library/ColorPickers/NSColorPickerWheel.colorPicker/Resources/hu.lproj/NSColorPickerWheel.nib/objects.nib, NSFilePath=/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly/2012-02-01-222347/Macintosh HD/System/Library/ColorPickers/NSColorPickerWheel.colorPicker/Resources/hu.lproj/NSColorPickerWheel.nib/objects.nib, NSUnderlyingError=0x7f9097095f40 "The operation couldn’t be completed. Not a directory"}
    2/2/12 12:50:07.294 AM com.apple.backupd: Error (256): fetching properties: Error Domain=NSCocoaErrorDomain Code=256 "The file “objects.nib” couldn’t be opened." UserInfo=0x7f9097359940 {NSURL=file://localhost/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly/2012-02-01-222347/Macintosh%20HD/System/Library/ColorPickers/NSColorPickerWheel.colorPicker/Resources/ko.lproj/NSColorPickerWheel.nib/objects.nib, NSFilePath=/Volumes/Mridanga/Backups.backupdb/googly/2012-02-01-222347/Macintosh HD/System/Library/ColorPickers/NSColorPickerWheel.colorPicker/Resources/ko.lproj/NSColorPickerWheel.nib/objects.nib, NSUnderlyingError=0x7f90973598e0 "The operation couldn’t be completed. Not a directory"}
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    OSX is having trouble reading or writing to the drive.  That's usually hardware (the drive, port, or cable).
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    Would this mean the particular hard drive is on it's way out ?
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    carl wolf wrote:
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    See these troubleshooting articles.
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