How do I backup iPhoto using a Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex external drive?

How do I backup iPhoto photos using a Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex external drive?

You may use Time Machine or 'drag and drop'.  Don't forget to format the new HDD in Disk Utility>Erase first.
Ciao.

Similar Messages

  • Mac OSX Tip - Lost Directory on Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex External Drive

    I have a Mac user (OSX Snow Leopard) who does a lot of video processing so 3 months ago, to speed video processing, I purchased a Seagate FreeAgent Goflex 1TB external drive with the optional Firewire adaptor (so I could run USB2 or Firewire). A few days ago, the drive became corrupt when it didn’t eject correctly and Seagate’s own software, that appears to run to mount the drive, would not terminate once the drive was mounted.
    The symptoms are:
    1. The disc appears on the Mac desktop after being plugged in.
    2. Most or all of the files and directories are missing.
    3. The free space on the drive reflects the fact that there are files still on the drive.
    4. Trying to eject the drive in the normal fashion results in a warning that the drive could not be ejected because an application is using files on the drive, so you must choose “force eject” to remove the drive from the desktop. Even if you freshly reboot the computer and just plug in the drive, it cannot be ejected normally.
    I contacted Seagate and, after going through their support section, ended up sending an e-mail and also figured out how to put a ticket in to support. The suggestions: a Seagate Do-it-yourself data recovery program (that scans the drive at 1GB per HOUR) or send the drive to them for their data recovery service at a cost anywhere from $700 to $2500+ to recover the data. Before you buy a Seagate drive, I would highly recommend that you visit the Seagate website because Data Recovery must be a BIG BUSINESS of theirs!
    In an effort to solve the problem, I purchased Disk Warrior (this was the suggestion of the Apple Store Genius folks but they were honest about it may/may not work). Trying to “Graph” or “Restore” the directory gave the following error in a few seconds.
    +The directory of the disk "1TB Firewire Portable" cannot be rebuilt.+
    +This disk is still in use. Quit all other applications, or restart from the DiskWarrior disc, and then try rebuilding again. If you report this error, please mention the error code (2153, 4903).+
    Without luck using Disk Warrior, I set off to find the application that was running that kept the drive from ejecting. Using “Activity Monitor”, I was able to find that the “Seagate Storage Gauge” application, even after being manually terminated as a job, would recreate itself in a second or two. There was no way to get rid of this application. I found the culprit - or at least I thought so.
    Here is how I managed to recover the data (I did NOT fix the drive).
    1. I removed the Seagate folder from the HD/Library/Applications Support folder (put it on my desktop). This directory contains the file “Seagate Storage Gauge”
    2. I “force eject”ed the Seagate Drive
    3. I unplugged the drive (by now, I’d done this a lot)
    4. I rebooted the computer (logging out/in does not fix this as Seagate used Root as the user for the application)
    5. After the computer rebooted, I plugged in the drive and was able to see the files and folders.
    At this point, it’s time to plug in another hard drive and copy everything except the Seagate programs that come on the Seagate drive.
    After recovering all my files, I still had to “force eject” the drive but at this point, it’s nothing but a paperweight to me. I do not trust this drive and will not buy another Seagate product.
    I’m hoping that this information will help others recover their own data from their Seagate drives, without purchasing the Data Recovery Service from Seagate.

    Although this may not be of help to you, perhaps it will help someone. I read a review of the Seagate STAM2000100 2TB GoFlex Home Network Storage System. It sounds like just what I needed, and after some brief research, I ordered it. When it arrived, I spent hours and hours trying to understand the installation instructions and researched the blogs on Apple, Seagate and other sites. Then I spent most of a day trying to make it play nice with my Mac. In the end I returned the product because of the effect it had on my iMac 5.1 running Snow Leopard. I did my best to undo the installation of Seagate software, but my hard drive was still having trouble starting.
    After much fiddling and research, I found a hint: try looking at the settings on the HD. Using the Disk Utility on the Mac, I had it Verify Permissions. It found lots of wrong settings, so I had it Repair Permissions. Now my Mac is back to its old self. ;<)

  • I have a Seagate Freeagent 1TB external drive that ejects it's self in the middle of the time machine backup, then disappears and can't be found unless I turn it off and back on again

    I have a Seagate Freeagent 1TB external drive that ejects it's self in the middle of the time machine backup, then disappears and can't be found unless I turn it off and back on again. Any ideas?

    Hmmm.. sorry to jump in but...
    I Wish I had seen this before I got mine.
    Mine has been doing this auto eject stuff too.
    I think I just plugged it in and TM let me select it but is it possible
    I should have reformatted it with DU first, like with all the WD drive problems ?
    Is it too late for that ?
    Or just try to return it or get rid of it ?
    TIA

  • Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex 1 tb not showing up in disk utility

    I am trying to use the Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex 1 tb external hard drive on my PowerBook G4.  After I plugged it in, it did not show up on my desktop. When I tried to format it by going to disk utilities, the drive does not show up in the left hand column. What should I do?  thank you

    Hello Hank,
    Still sounds like a power problem to me, based on reports I've seen here over the 12+ years I've been haunting these forums. You have three options, two cheap and one more expensive. First the expensive one:
    1) Return the Seagate drive and get one from OWC. Many name-brand externals don't play well with Macs, especially drives that have to get power from the USB port. An OWC product that works with or without an external power supply is this one:
    http://eshop.macsales.com/shop/firewire/on-the-go
    It has a port for an optional AC power supply, shown toward the bottom of the page. Generally, OWC drives usually work fine from USB power alone as they are optimized for Macs.
    Now for the cheap options:
    2) Get a powered USB hub (comes with its own power brick). The external power source makes up for the lack of power available at the port.
    3) Get a "Y" cable:
    http://eshop.macsales.com/item/Other%20World%20Computing/USB2AYMBPB/
    It attaches to two USB ports to get extra power to turn the drive motor and run the controller board.
    If you must have an outlet-free drive for mobile use, options 1 and 3 are applicalble. I use powered drives because, when traveling, I only use my externals when I'm in a hotel or at someone's office where power outlets are available.
    Hope this helps
    Allan

  • I'm using a Intel Core 2 Duo Mac OS X 10.4.11. When installing the Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex portable hard drive, I find an error in the logs - "dyld: Symbol not found: ___stack_chk_guard". How do I fix this? Thanks,

    I'm using a Intel Core 2 Duo Mac OS X 10.4.11. When installing the Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex portable hard drive, I find an error in the logs - "dyld: Symbol not found: ___stack_chk_guard"
    Referenced from: /Volumes/Mac Installer/MacInstall.app/Contents/MacOS/MacInstall
      Expected in: /usr/lib/libSystem.B.dylib
    How do I fix this? Thanks,

    OK, OSX can read that but not write, but...
    A few options...
    You could format that HDD as Fat32/MS-DOS, but you'd be limited to 4 GB Filesizes.
    NTFS-3G Stable Read/Write Driver...
    http://www.ntfs-3g.org/
    MacFUSE: Full Read-Write NTFS for Mac OS X, Among Others...
    http://www.osnews.com/story/16930
    MacDrive for the PCs... allows them to Read/Write HFS+...
    http://www.mediafour.com/products/macdrive/

  • How do I backup iPhoto on external drive

    Heard that some hackers are ransoming people's digital photos on computers. Want to back up my iPhoto library to an external drive. How do I do this?

    Drag the /Home/Pictures/iPhoto Library file(s) to the external drive.

  • How do you import photos from a library on an external drive to the current library running in iPhoto?

    How do you import photos from a library on an external drive to the current library running in iPhoto? I have a few different pictures in each library and would like to have all my pictures in both libraries. The library on the external drive is my backup. I would appreciate any help.

    Depends on exactly what you want to do.
    Just move some of the Photos? FIle -> Export from one and export the shots to the Finder. Then import them to the other.
    This User Tip
    https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-4921
    has details of the options in the Export dialogue.
    Move the photos and all versions and metadata: use iPhoto Library Manager it's the only way to do this while preserving everything. Merge two Libraries into one?
    If you have Aperture 3.3 or later and iPhoto 9.3 or later you can merge libraries with Aperture.
    Otherwise the only way to merge Libraries is with the paid ($20) version of iPhoto Library Manager

  • I'm out of space on my hard drive. How do I move move entire photo albums from iphoto and save them to an external drive to free up space?

    I'm out of space on my hard drive. How do I move move entire photo albums from iphoto and save them to an external drive to free up space?

    You do not move the albums - you move the entire iphoto library intake as a single entity
    Make sure your external drive is formatted Ma OS extended (journaled) - then
    Moving the iPhoto library is safe and simple - quit iPhoto and drag the iPhoto library intact as a single entity to the external drive - depress the option key and launch iPhoto using the "select library" option to point to the new location on the external drive - fully test it and then trash the old library on the internal drive (test one more time prior to emptying the trash)
    And be sure that the External drive is formatted Mac OS extended (journaled) (iPhoto does not work with drives with other formats) and that it is always available prior to launching iPhoto
    And backup soon and often - having your iPhoto library on an external drive is not a backup and if you are using Time Machine you need to check and be sure that TM is backing up your external drive
    LN

  • Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex 500GB Disconnects Unexpectedly during Time Machine backups

    I have a 20" 2.4GHz Intel Core 2 Duo (Early 2008) iMac with 4GB Ram.  A few days ago I finally took the time to upgrade from Snow Leopard to Mavericks.  I have 3 Seagate external drives connected to the iMac (2 connected directly and one through a powered hub - all via USB).  I use one of the external drives, a 500GB Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex named TARDIS for my Time Machine backups.  This has been running fine for quite a while.  After the upgrade to Mavericks I started seeing it disconnect unexpectedly.  There were no power fluctuations, the cord was not bumped, and this had never happened prior to the upgrade.
    I searched these boards and found several people having issues with drives disconnecting after upgrading and followed suggestions regarding resetting the pram which I did to no effect, a suggestion to delete the com.apple.TimeMachine.plist preferences file which I did, also to no effect.  Finally, knowing that I didn't have anything irreplaceable on the existing Time Machine backups, I re-formatted the drive - this also had no effect.  Through this process I discovereed that the disconnects were always happening while Time Machine was trying to run a backup.  It would get to about 20 megabytes backed up and then just sit there until it gave me the drive was improperly disconnected message.
    I was getting really frustrated at this point.  I read something somewhere about issues with the main drive causing errors with Time Machine (not sure the details at this point) and so I did a Verify Disk on my internal system drive.  It did find some issues so I followed the instructions to repair them which worked fine.  I also ran the verify on the Time Machine drive which did not discover any issues.
    I reformatted the drive again, giving it a different name (Backup).  I set up Time Machine again to backup to the newly named drive.  It was backing up properly.  I thought I had finally gotten it into a working state.  I thought maybe there was a trace of the old drive name somewhere that was causing the issue.  The backup finished successfully.  All was good.  Until the next time Time Machine started to run when it again stalled before disconnecting.
    I reformatted the drive one more time, giving it yet another new name (Delorean) and have not set up Time Machine.  If I don't run Time Machine, the drive does not suffer issues with disconnecting.  I have tried copying a large file to the drive to see if some I/O would trigger a disconnect and I had no problems.  I plan to run a few more tests like this but so far it has been connected for more than 24 hours and has not disconnected itself.  This to me suggests it is something to do with Time Machine running under Mavericks.  I don't have another Mac that I can try running Time Machine on to verify that this is an issue caused by Mavericks but that seems to be the case.
    Any ideas?

    its a dying SATA bridge card, extremely common issue.
    read all about it here:
    Your dead external hard drive is likely fine! Great hope for your 'faulty' external HD
    I really wish people would learn about the A #1 issue that affects external HD,  its a 50 cent part that makes it seem their ext. HD has failed / failing.
    Thousands of people every day experience what at first seems that their external USB or Thunderbolt HD, either 2.5" portable or 3.5" desktop model is dying, is dead, or all hope is lost for it. Good news is that you have roughly a greater than 50-60% chance that your external hard drive is perfectly fine!
    The great news at the end of the tunnel of an apparently failed or failing external hard drive.
    When checked on another computer, and with no need for spending money on data extraction expertise or software, the very likely case is that your external USB or thunderbolt HD is in fact fine, and merely the card interface, or SATA bridge card has failed or is failing.  Keeping a HD dock around handy, or cheaper still a $20 hard drive enclosure or a SATA to USB connector can be a real life saver in getting your drive back to use, when the drive itself is fine, and merely its interface card has gone bad.
    The SATA bridge card inside a USB external HD has a very high failure rate in general
    Typical SATA bridge cards as seen inside a 3.5" external HD with power input (#1), and 2.5" SATA cards (#3, #4, #5)
    What are the realistic odds your HD is perfectly fine?
    There are no hard facts whatsoever, especially since so many people discard their assumed “dead/faulty” hard drives, but a good educated conclusion from years of examining and seeing this issue is that for hard drives made since 2010, and not dropped or generally abused, is that a minimum of 50% conservatively are perfectly fine! I personally estimate however that it likely approaches 60%+.
    Considering how many external hard drives ‘fail’ (rather the SATA bridge more than half the time) each day, that is a very high number of perfectly fine HD that are tossed!
    This is especially common with 3.5” desktop HD that are connected 24/7 with power and see a lot of data transfer. People wrongly conclude that “X” mfg. just made a defective drive, when in fact their 3.5” drives inside the plastic enclosure is 100% fine.  I have personally seen well over 200 of these dead SATA cards and additionally seen 3 fail within a one hour span of doing a large data copies.
    One of the very reason pros use bare HD as inserted into HD docks is not just the saving of space and the need for endless USB cables, but the elimination of the need for this high failure-rate part.
    While the shapes and sizes vary somewhat on SATA bridge cards, they all serve the same purpose and have likewise failure rates
    What exactly is the SATA bridge card in your external HD?
    In the middle to late of 2009, most all external hard drives both in 2.5” and 3.5” reached the shelves in SATA III. These small SATA cards or "bridges" are used to translate between the hard drives’ interfaces and the enclosures' external ports (USB, Thunderbolt, Firewire). Additionally these small bridges not only transfer power but also of course the data. Unfortunately these SATA bridge cards have a very high failure rate as they are burdened with moving power (in 2.5" HD) and of course data.
    Literally, these little unreliable and fragile cards are the power conduits and of course the nervous system for all external HD data transfer.
    SATA card as found inside a typical USB external hard drive
    The assumption that the hard drive is bad when its not!
    Countless 1000s of good external hard drives are thrown away each year because the owner thought the HD was bad when it fact it was the SATA bridge card which had failed. This card is removed in a matter of mere second once an external USB HD is cracked open from its plastic casing to reveal the bare HD and the attached SATA card which attaches between the HD and the USB cable.
    To complicate this problem, even many computer professionals do not know that there is a very easy solution to the “failing or dead HD” issue since the hard drive itself is very likely just fine.  Its astonishing that so many highly educated computer repair persons are unaware of this high-failure part, but this is mostly due to the fact that they do not juggle 100s of hard drives and know that of the iceberg that is a “external hard drive failure”, the mostly unseen majority are not a HD failure at all, but a bridge card failure.
    To add to this great misunderstanding is the fact that people assume that "likewise symptoms seen on an external HD are the same as seen on an internal HD, therefore also the external HD must be bad". This is a compositional fallacy of logic. Since internal HD do not have a SATA bridge interface, to conclude similar symptoms "indicate the same failure" is misplaced and incorrect.
    This is all not to say that HD do not fail, they do indeed, and I have seen many 100s of dead and failing hard drives.  Hard drives even under ideal conditions have a life expectancy of around 4-8 years due to ferromagnetic depolarization from entropy and the main reason being mechanical failure.  But of the mountain of symptoms that are seen as “hard drive failures” in comments, posts, and hearsay, half or more of these are not a HD failure at all.
    What makes up an external USB HD or Thunderbolt HD?
    While modern external HD boxes vary in shape and size somewhat, they're the same inside on almost 100% of them.
    Four parts essentially:
    1. Your 2.5” or 3.5” hard drive.
    2. The plastic or metal box it rests in.
    3. The USB cable and also (in the case of the 3.5” external) the power cable and block. 
    4. The SATA bridge card. 
    Clear USB HD in its case, with green SATA card at top,...not shown is the USB cable
    The USB cables are almost entirely unheard of today to fail, and the box enclosure cannot fail, leaving the good HD you have taken care of and the 50 cent part which juggles both power and data to and from the HD itself, that being the SATA card.
    What drives will work for this go-around fix?
    Almost any drive 2010 and later, all 3.5” HD mid-2010 and on, and almost all USB 2.5” external hard drives, including firewire, and thunderbolt enclosure encased conventional platter hard drives.
    The rare exception is a slimline 7mm thick "slim" external HD in both Toshiba and WD in certain models where the SATA bridge has been incorporated into the HD to save money and production costs.
    Much older drives 2009 and earlier will not work for this faulty part work around.

  • How to use Time Machine with an external drive?

    Hi…I’m new to this, I hope someone can help me=)
    I’m trying to back up my Macbook Pro 10.6.8 using Time Machine with an external drive Seagate Backplus Slim. I’ve tried several solutions that I’ve found through different forums but still wouldn’t work.
    Every time I opened Time Machine, it has this appearance:
    Then when I click “Select backup Disk”, it goes on like this:
    And after I click “Set Up Time Capsule”, it has this:
    It keeps saying that it couldn’t find AirPort wireless, even though I have good WIFI connection.
    Anyone know what I should do? Please help….Thanks everyone

    Ayuphie ~ In your Time Machine Preferences panel, slide the OFF-ON switch to the ON position:

  • I just created a slide show with iPhoto 11 on my MacBook Air.  How do I save this to a DVD on my external drive so that it will play on a DVD player?

    I just created a slide show with iPhoto 11 on my MacBook Air.  How do I save this to a DVD on my external drive so that it will play on a DVD player?

    Hi
    If there is no iDVD on Your Mac (and it's not on newer Macs as Apple discarded it) then You need a program that can do this.
    Your Mac can burn CDs and DVDs - BUT DVD as Data-DVDs not as Video-DVDs - they need a program to be encoded and STRUCTURED as such.
    • iDVD is part of the boxed version of iLife'11 and can only be bought outside Apple as on Amazon and e-bay
    • DVD Studio pro - Part of FinalCut Studio Pro bundle - this to has expired and can only be bought second handed. (High price and tough learning Curve - but best ever done.)
    • Roxio Toast™ - Not as elegant as iDVD - but has many other positive additions (I like it as 10-Pro incl BD-component) (now version 11)
    • Burn - only free alternative I know of on internet. Very simple - Just for doing a plain Video-DVD
    Burn http://www.digital-digest.com/software/Burn.html
    only You can buy from Apple is
    • FinalCut Pro-X which also can burn to DVD but without any nice themes.
    AppleMan1958
    You can also buy Compressor from Apple for $50 US. It will also create DVD and BluRay but without the nice themes.
    Yours Bengt W

  • How can you back up files that are on an external drive?

    How can you back up files that are on an external drive?

    hw999 wrote:
    How can you back up files that are on an external drive?
    Easy way, CLONE IT to another HD
    HD cloning software options:
    1. SuperDuper HD cloning software APP (free)
    2. Carbon Copy Cloner APP (will copy the recovery partition as well)
    3. Disk utility HD bootable clone.
    Methodology to protect your data. Backups vs. Archives. Long-term data protection
    https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-6031
    hw999 wrote:But all I want to do is include the data that I store on an (second) external drive (internal drive getting too full) part of the auto back up process using timemachine.
    BAD IDEA
    You want one backup (ie Time machine) and one (or more) data archive of just all your raw files (drag and drop, or cloned etc.)

  • My hard drive died.  How can I start my computer with my Time Machine external drive?

    My hard drive died.  How can I start my computer with my Time Machine external drive?

    Pondini wrote:
    If you're on 10.7.2, yes, you can boot from the TM drive.
    Beep, beep, beep....
    Hold ON! Getting a call on the red phone.
    "Yes...yes.... ok!"
    It's confirmed, H.e.l.l. has finally frozen over!  TM drives are now bootable!
    Still it's not a real bootable clone, can't run the computer off the external drive for long in only Recovery mode, still requires the boot drive to be replaced if it not functional, and with TM backing up every hour, isn't going to offer much software protection as the TM drive is just as likely to be as messed up as the internal boot drive.
    For a iMac it still requires the computer to be taken in to Apple for a drive replacement, as ONLY Apple can do it due to proprietary connections and firmware on the iMac hard drives.
    But it is bootable!
    The backup time factor can be controlled using TimeMachine Editor, from every hour to just when the user thinks it's necessary.
    Apple lurches slightly forward!  Hurray!
    Question is, can one restore from earlier stable TM's or just the last one? In this bootable fashion?

  • Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex Desk frustration

    Hi all,
    I recently purchased a 2TB Seagate FreeAgent GoFlex Desk external hard drive. Unfortunately, there seems to be a conflict with either my hardware or software. The drive seems to go to sleep after a period on non-use and consequently crashes the Finder and various apps when trying to gain access. I can see the icon for the drive... even navigate down some recently used directories, but then I'll go too far, get the beach ball and have to force restart the entire machine. The same will happen if I'm using an app trying to access files on the drive. I can force quit the app and/or Finder, but they will not be available for use until I force quit the entire machine. I've been trying to solve this problem for a couple weeks now without success, so I thought I'd turn to the Mac community here.
    * The drive has been reformatted Mac OS Extended (Journaled).
    * I have used Seagate Diagnostics and the drive passes all tests.
    * I have disabled drive sleep under Energy Saver.
    * I have tested the drive on a MacBook running the same OS as my iMac (10.6.6) without a problem.
    * I have disabled Time Machine backup to a TimeCapsule to see if that helps. Does not.
    * I have disconnected other drives to see if that helps. Does not.
    * I have disabled virus scans, media servers and other apps (that I know of) that sometime run in BG.
    * I have tried different USB ports and different wall plugs.
    I'm beginning to think there is some sort of compatibility issue with my hardware, but it could still be some sort of software that is conflicting. I simply cannot find the pattern.
    I spoke with Seagate support and we got as far as the recommendation to test on another machine. The drive seemed to work fine there, so I'll have to continue troubleshooting with them from that point, but I thought someone here might have some ideas as well.

    The O.P. reported using Seagate Diagnostics unsuccessfully, but I wondered if anyone had used the
    GoFlex for Mac software.
    Below is Seagate's description. You can see that it specifically says that it includes drivers to disable the built-in sleep timer (which I think is the cause of the problem(. Somewhere in the Seagate discussion forums I think I saw that you don't have to set anything, just installing the relevant drivers is enough.
    As I mentioned previously, it is possible to look at the scripts in the installation package, but I found them too complicated to understand.
    I agree with gogogut that having the drive spin constantly is not a good solution for most people. I only used that drive for video programs and processing them, so I unmounted and turned the drive off except when I needed it to be active.
    File Version: 1.1.2
    File Name: Seagate GoFlex Software.mpkg.zip
    File Size: 5MB
    Supported Operating Systems: MacOS 10.5.11+, MacOS 10.6
    Summary
    Seagate Drive Settings application for MacOS is included on the GoFlex series of drives. Simply double click it to install the software. If the software was deleted, it can be downloaded using the link below.
    This software package includes Diagnostic software for testing the drive, drivers to disable the built-in sleep timer on the drive, and drivers to enable the capacity gauge for GoFlex Desk models. It has now been updated to support 64-bit and 32-bit version of MacOS.

  • My Mac crashed. I got a new hard drive. I reinstalled Lightroom. Fortunately ircats are stored on an external drive. How do I import all of the old catalogues from external drive into a new LR catalogue. I have done it before. It has just been many years

    My Mac crashed. I got a new hard drive. I reinstalled Lightroom. Fortunately ircats are stored on an external drive. How do I import all of the old catalogues from external drive into a new LR catalogue. I have done it before. It has just been many years and I can't recall how.

    If you had stored your catalog files on an external drive, then all you have to do is double-click on them to open them and use them.
    Or you could move them to the internal drive and double-click on them once the move is completed.
    To create a single catalog file from multiple ones, you could use File->Import from Another Catalog

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