Is Apple Time Capsule a Hard Drive?

I am running out of storage on my MacBook Pro 13 inch. I want to buy a external hard drive for my Mac. I heard about the Apple Time Capsule and thought "Is this an external hard drive or it's just some kind of thing that you can backup". The thing is that I DONT want to backup, I just want to use it as a USB/HARD-DRIVE.
So answer this: Is it a USB or NOT
                         Is it a EXTERNAL HARD DRIVE or NOT

The Time Capsule cannot be used as a USB hard drive with your Mac, so it will not make much difference whether you call it an external or a network drive.

Similar Messages

  • Time capsule external hard drive backup

    I want to back up & save all of my pics, movies, music to the time capsule hard drive so that iTunes can use them from the Time Capsule hard drive & I don't have to keep all that stored on my MacBook.  Can someone help explain how to do that?

    Looks like you just need to move your iTunes Media folder to Time Capsule's hard drive and then let iTunes know of the new location.

  • Airport Time Capsule as Hard Drive and Wireless Router

    Hello,
    My girlfriend and I want to buy Macbooks. A Macbook Pro 128 GB and a Macbook Air 128 GB. 128GB each is not enough for our needs and are also interested in buying an Airport Time Capsule with 2 TB rather than upgrading to 256GB/512GB, which is more money for less storage space.
    My question is, can we use the Airport Time Capsule as a wireless router AND as a wireless hard drive?
    Will I be able to keep the Time Capsule at home working as a wireless router for my girlfriend to surf the web and at the same, if I am at the library, as a wireless hard drive via internet so I can download the files i need?
    If the network is down I would like to be able to use it via cable as a wired hard drive. Is that possible?
    I searched for days for an answer but I could not find a definitive answer to my question.
    Thank you!
    Best regards,
    Liviu

    My question is, can we use the Airport Time Capsule as a wireless router AND as a wireless hard drive?
    Yes. The Time Capsule has a built-in hard drive and you can add additional USB hard drives (via a USB hub) to its USB port. All of these drives can be shared out and will appear in the Finder as network drives.
    Will I be able to keep the Time Capsule at home working as a wireless router for my girlfriend to surf the web and at the same, if I am at the library, as a wireless hard drive via internet so I can download the files i need?
    Yes, that is also possible. Please check out the following AirPort User tip for more details on how this can be set up.
    If the network is down I would like to be able to use it via cable as a wired hard drive. Is that possible?
    If you mean if the wireless network is down can you still access the Time Capsule's hard drive via an Ethernet connection, then the answer is yes.

  • Can i format my time capsule's hard drive from fat32 to exFAT

    can i format my time capsule's hard drive from fat32 to exFAT. and why shd mac make a harddrive fat32 knowing final cut will not recorgnise it

    The internal hard drive in a Time Capsule is formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled) and can't be changed to another format without taking it out of the case.
    Unlike non-network drives, it'll appear to Windows as being FAT32 out of the box but isn't subject to the 4GB file size restriction.
    (68112)

  • Can I retrieve files from a Time Capsule data hard-drive if I completed a simple-erase on it?

    I have a 2TB Time Capsule. I stored files on the hard drive within the Time Capsule. I did a quick-erase of the hard drive (Time Capsule) via Airport Utility on my MacBook Pro and forgot the files were on it. Is there anyway I can retrieve these files? The Time Capsule's 2TB capacity was hardly used at all, I used it for Time Machine but apart from that I just stored some files on it. Thank you in advance if you could help.

    As per Bob's comment.. BUTT.. big fat one.
    The disk has to be out of the TC to do it. You need to directly access the disk so you need to remove the disk (voiding warranty) and place it in a usb holder and plug into a computer. If you are very careful pulling up the rubber mat. Using lots of heat from heat gun or hair dryer with half the inlet blocked.. and carefully pull up the mat leaving the label last and not stetching it.. the mat should go back with nobody knowing.. !!
    http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Replacing-Apple-Time-Capsule-HDD/2750/1
    I hope you stopped using the TC immediately. Any new files will overwrite the old ones.
    I went through this exercise recently to help a customer with a dead WD hard disk in their Gen 4 TC.. The data partition had lost format. Using just the demo of data rescue 3.. as I could not find a demo of Disk Warrior and I refuse to pay for something that offers no refund.. $100 is not too much if it works.. but it is expensive if you get nothing. But it will very likely work. Certainly the files were still available and correctly named.. but the demo does not allow much of a test.. but still looked hopeful. Customer wanted the hard disk changed wanted to do the recovery herself.. which is fine.
    BTW if you have a choice find a tool that allows you to copy the files... you might need to buy another USB disk so you have a suitable target that is big enough. It is possible to repair a drive and so just recover the files.. the fast erase simply wipes the allocation table. Files should not be affected.. but any changes to the disk are permanent and if it goes bad will make it even more difficult to recover.. It can take a long time to copy files off but is safest route.
    TC is a backup target.. the whole idea of backup is having at least 2 locations for your files.. by placing files on the TC.. there is no automated backup.. the disk could have died and you will lose everything.. this is kind of a warning.. don't do it.

  • Can you hook up PS3 to time capsule for hard drive?

    I want to know before I buy a PS3 if you can hook it up to the Apple Time Capsule to see the music, Videos, and pictures stored on it.

    As per Bob's comment.. BUTT.. big fat one.
    The disk has to be out of the TC to do it. You need to directly access the disk so you need to remove the disk (voiding warranty) and place it in a usb holder and plug into a computer. If you are very careful pulling up the rubber mat. Using lots of heat from heat gun or hair dryer with half the inlet blocked.. and carefully pull up the mat leaving the label last and not stetching it.. the mat should go back with nobody knowing.. !!
    http://www.ifixit.com/Guide/Replacing-Apple-Time-Capsule-HDD/2750/1
    I hope you stopped using the TC immediately. Any new files will overwrite the old ones.
    I went through this exercise recently to help a customer with a dead WD hard disk in their Gen 4 TC.. The data partition had lost format. Using just the demo of data rescue 3.. as I could not find a demo of Disk Warrior and I refuse to pay for something that offers no refund.. $100 is not too much if it works.. but it is expensive if you get nothing. But it will very likely work. Certainly the files were still available and correctly named.. but the demo does not allow much of a test.. but still looked hopeful. Customer wanted the hard disk changed wanted to do the recovery herself.. which is fine.
    BTW if you have a choice find a tool that allows you to copy the files... you might need to buy another USB disk so you have a suitable target that is big enough. It is possible to repair a drive and so just recover the files.. the fast erase simply wipes the allocation table. Files should not be affected.. but any changes to the disk are permanent and if it goes bad will make it even more difficult to recover.. It can take a long time to copy files off but is safest route.
    TC is a backup target.. the whole idea of backup is having at least 2 locations for your files.. by placing files on the TC.. there is no automated backup.. the disk could have died and you will lose everything.. this is kind of a warning.. don't do it.

  • Apple TV & Time Capsule's Hard Drive Used for iTunes Media Only !

    I would like to use the Time Capsule Hard Drive just for my iTunes. Not Time Machine. Time Capsule will be my Wireless Base Station (router) as well. But I'm going to plug my Mac Mini into the Time Capsule via Gigabit Ethernet. Will this work & how well (fast) will it stream the media from my iTunes to the Apple TV? I'm not synching any files on the Apple TV's Hard Drive. All Video & Music will be streaming! I know this is not what Time Capsule was intended for, but will it work & again, how well will it stream ? Is there a downside to setting it up this way ? Also, I'm not buying any Movies from the iTunes store. Thanks in advance!

    OK, so having my Mac & TC hardwired by Ethernet, is like having the Hard Drive inside the TC hard wired to my Mac? Correct ? I'm sorry to repeat myself but I'm just trying to understand all this. I'm bad with Networking! So you think I should be streaming OK even with watching a movie I have in iTunes (which lives on the TC Internal Hard Drive) on my Apple TV? My Apple TV will be used Wirelessly. No Ethernet to Apple TV. Again, I appreciate the help. I don't want to buy it & find I can't do what I want. B&H in NY have the older TC 500 GB Model for $199.95 And I have a crappy router currently. So I figure I can kill 2 birds with one stone.( I love Birds. It's just an expression! If it works, it would be ideal for my situation.

  • Time capsule, external hard drive, iTunes media library

    Hi,
    i want to setup my time capsule, at the same time I want to export my iTunes library to an external harddrive. following questions:
    - I setup my time capsule currently only as wifi, not yet as a backup medium
    - how do I set this whole thing up and in what sequence?
    - I want to use movies purchased on iTunes from the library and not from the store, possible? Not via Apple TV I assume but via iTunes?
    - I want to access movies located on the external hard drive from anywhere in my home network, possible?
    I need to do this as I moved from usa to Europe and have To change my apple store. Before I change the store I need to download all movies to an external harddrive otherwise I cannot use them anymore due to license issues. Apple cannot help me here unfortunately.
    the change is also necessary as staying in the US store causes more and more complications.
    ideas are welcome!
    thanks!

    You can relocate your iTunes to an external hard disk .. plugged into the computer that is fine.. using it on a hard drive plugged into the TC is not so OK.. it can work but it will be slow.
    - I want to use movies purchased on iTunes from the library and not from the store, possible? Not via Apple TV I assume but via iTunes?
    Yes, you can use the iTunes library to store and play the movie. it has to run from iTunes on the computer. I am not sure I understand the last bit about apple TV.. it is simply a streamer.. (unless you have Gen1 which can store movies on the hard disk). The Apple TV connects to your iTunes running on a computer. The TC has nothing to do with this, other than being part of the network.
    Note the TC has no media extensions nor is it media aware.. it is a dumb wireless router.. that is all.
    - I want to access movies located on the external hard drive from anywhere in my home network, possible?
    Access movies is fine.. read Apple prescribed method.
    iTunes: How to share music and video
    There is a lot of links to home sharing.
    Again the TC is irrelevant to this, other than it ties the network.. but a switch or any other router could be doing that.. so the TC is of no particular use here.
    For backups just setup TM in the computer to backup to the TC.. that is standard part of the setup.. and there is nothing particular in the TC required for that.. other than it plugs into the main router.. so exists as part of the network.

  • Time Capsule/usb hard drive- How to get Time Machine to back it up

    I installed Time Machine with no problems. A 1 TB LaCie hard drive is attached by usb cable to the TC. The LaCie is seen by finder and I can open, edit and save files to it and so can the Macbook Pro on my network.
    Time Machine backed up my internal hard drive on my Mac just fine, but Time Machine refuses to see the external Lacie drive so it cannot back it up.
    Here is the situation:
    1. If I go to Time machine preferences and click Options there are no volumes or folders listed as Do Not Back Up. nothing is there.
    2. If I click Change Disk the name I gave my Time Capsule is listed as it should be but the LaCie drive is listed also as if it were possible for me to back up to that also. The LaCie's name is there with the name of the Time Capsule in parenthesis. Isn't that odd?
    3. When I select the LaCie icon on my desktop and select Get Info in the Sharing & Permissions section it says, "You have custom access" below it says
    Name Privilege
    (unknown) Read & Write
    everyone No Access
    I am new to Mac in general and this permission and sharing thing is still a bit mysterious to me so I don't know if these sharing & permission settings are usual or weird and could be contributing to why the back up of the LaCie drive is not happening.
    This is the final hurdle I have in absolutely convincing my small but vocal office that switching to Macs all around was a great idea.
    Any help would be appreciated.

    This is a really odd answer.
    I have Time Capsule, I add an external drive to it and you say that to back up THAT disk on Time Capsule I need other programs/solutions? This is really a stupid thing.
    1 TB of storage space just for local files right now that on every wireless product you can add an external disk?
    In other words with Apple products I can have all my laptopsappleTvdesktops all wirelessly connected but I can't use Time Capsule to back up datas if disks are not locally attached? With Airport Extreme/Time Capsule I can share datas (music, pictures, my digital life files) with my family computers but if I do this I can't back up these files.
    And just to know how many do I have to spend on other Apple devices, what are these "other solutions" to back up network drives? A server?

  • Using Time Capsule as Hard Drive for Videos

    This is likely a simple issue but I want to ensure that I do this properly. My internal hard drive is near capacity. I store a lot of media on my internal hard drive such as photos, music and video. I would like to move the video files (both edited and unedited) to my Time Capsule to free up space on my internal hard drive and continue to store and access/edit the photos on my internal hard drive. I would like to continue to use iMovie and other software to edit the videos which will be moved to Time Capsule. I tried to drag and drop the movie files from my hard drive to the Time Capsule Data folder but it started simply making a copy of the movie files rather than moving them entirely. I want to make sure that iMovie will "find" these files when I open the application.
    I did something similar with my music library. While I have issues such as iTunes not finding the music (even though I changed the location of the music directory within iTunes preferences, iTunes still shows a circle with an ! in it for a good portion of my music which is frustrating bt that s a topic for another day), I want to make sure that I do this propoerly as these videos are special family videos that I have spent a good deal of time ediing.
    Oh and one other thing, I am about to transfer a lot of new unedited video taken over the holidays and I want to make sure when I download them to my Mac, that the new video is saved directly to the new Time Capsule video folders.
    Thanks for the help in advance!

    I am not saying you cannot use it.. I am saying it is far from ideal.
    If your TC dies. as they do .. and take it to apple, they will then change the story to say that it is a backup device.. there are no parts available for the TC, no service, no repairs.. it will be replaced in warranty. Wave goodbye to your content.. as they will do nothing to recover it.. if you remove the disk, or tamper in any way you will have voided the warranty. No NAS on the market (worth the name) seals in the hard disk.
    The hard drive is a WD green.. far from the best hard drive around.. and whilst apple claim server quality.. I think their definition of servers and mine has reached snapping point. They are using MTBF from 15years ago or more.
    For things like media, where you are handling large files.. a single green drive, without raid, in a backup device on the network are slow. Set to spin down 1min after file transfer is complete.. is so far from ideal it is ridiculous.
    The reality is, Apple simply do not have another product.. a suitable one available.. and with the wide spread change to ssd, people are rapidly discovering their 128 and 256GB drives do not cut it.
    I am glad you are at least using some backup regime.. that it isn't built into the TC is IMHO another indication that it isn't what apple are claiming it to be. Indeed even the pathetic attempt at backup they had built into the v5 utility, archive to USB drive.. no increments,, always the whole disk.. extremely slow.. was removed from the v6 utility. You cannot sell a device as a NAS without any way to backup, other than using a third party product.

  • Full Restore from Time Capsule after hard drive failure

    Authorized agent replaced hard drive after it failed. Installed 10.5.5 and currently attempting to do a full restore from Time Capsule - progress is slow and in question after 22 hours. The backup size approx. 100 gb.
    Screen reads "Transferring Information" at the top, progress bar is moving, and bottom of the screen reads "Looking for applications and documents to transfer" and hasn't changed for 22 hours.
    Is this normal? how long should 100 gb take to restore?

    think about the speed of wifi here
    speed at 802.11n = a theoretical 540Mbps (less in real world scenarios)
    Mbps = Mega bits per second
    MBps - Mega bytes per second
    8 bits = 1 byte
    8 mega bits = 1 mega byte
    How long would it take you to download a 1 gig file from the internet wired into your modem? About 10-20 min? And that is taking into account that the info is being uploaded hardwire. Now imagine that same file over wireless in your home being upload by the Airport card in your computer. People over look upload speed when considering these things. The wireless upload speed of your Airport card is what is limiting this. Just a limitation of the technology, not a fault of Apple just stating the numbers here.

  • Cannot restore from Time Capsule after hard drive replacement (recall)!

    Hard drive was replaced on a recall from Apple. I have spent weeks on the phone with Applecare whose conclusion now is that a WD drive I had connected about a year ago (and which was disconnected and software uninstalled) has corrupted the files on the Time Capsule (?) Anyone heard of that?
    I am a photographer and all my photos are there (?) The capsule appears to be quite full.
    Anyways Apple won't pay for recovery since they say 3d party software caused the issue.. WHY DO THEY SELL THOSE DRIVES IN THE STORE THEN?
    Solutions anyone?

    See Pondini's <a href="http://Pondini.org/TM/FAQ.html">TM FAQs</a>, for starters.
    As for why they carry 3rd-party stuff in the stores, that's to satisfy their customers desires, but they don't guarantee them to work. WD externals have s a history of being crapola w/Macs, since they're focused on windows boxes.

  • Time capsule as hard drive?

    My time capsule is set up to be my wireless router and uses time machine.  Both work great and many back ups have occurred.  But, I also want to use it as an external wireless hard drive and I cannot write to the disk.  2 Tb is a ton of space for just back up and i want to move stuff from my laptop to time capsule (my harddrive is only 125 gb) to free up space on my laptop.  I thought this would be simple and work out of the box!  What do I do to get it to be a hard drive too?

    Do not forget.. the TC itself is a backup device and there is now no backup to any files offloaded from your laptop.. And TC is not known for reliability.. and apple do not recover files.. they simply replace them.. expect no help if things go wrong.. it is a backup device only.
    So to make use of this post, how do I get it so I can access my time capsule harddrive remotely (i.e. if i am at work)  Thanks!
    Read up the iCloud btmm.. you can google it.. that is the easy way.
    If you don't want to use icloud then there are other ways.. most of which require you to have a static public IP or be able to bridge the TC to a vpn router.

  • Non-Time Capsule network hard drive as Time Machine drive? (D-Link DNS-323)

    I'm considering burying a D-Link DNS-323 and plopping a few internal HDs into it to use it as a networked Time Machine backup system.
    As far as I've been able to tell, the D-Link DNS-323 will format the hard drives as EXT2, not GUID. Will I still be able to use it as a Time Machine backup drive? Has anyone gotten this setup to work?
    Thanks for any and all advice!

    his article describes how to get TM work with NAS units (ReadyNAS) - I am currently running this configuration and it works like a charm on wireless. Highly recommended - you just have to modify parts of it for other makes of NAS but on the Mac side you should be fine.
    Follow the instructions carefully - it's easy to get ahead of yourself.
    Here is the article:
    http://www.readynas.com/?p=253
    Making Time Machine work with the ReadyNAS
    April 20, 2008 by yoh-dah
    Filed under Mac Corner
    Leave a Comment
    The following is a summary of how to make Time Machine work with the ReadyNAS by DavidB based on initial contribution by btaroli and refinements by sirozha and a host of others on the ReadyNAS Mac/OSX Forum. We are thankful of the Mac enthusiasts who frequent and contribute to the ReadyNAS forum.
    Ok I’ve just converted a second machine to use the NAS for networked Time Machine backups, and this time things went straight through without any mistakes. Here’s the run-down:
    This example was done using a Mac Mini with a hostname of “magpie”, running OS X 10.5.2 and connected via 802.11g to a ReadyNAS NV+ (RAIDiator 4.01c1-p1 http://1.00a041 with AFP patch loaded). I’ve created separate AFP shares for each machine (”TMmagpie” in this case) and set them to be accessible just to the “owner” of the machine. I could have set up one share to contain Time Machine backups for all clients, but then it could be possible for a user to access someone else’s private data within the backups.
    Do make sure to keep the hostname simple — i.e. don’t have quotes in it like “Maggie’s Mac”, or the process will fail.
    With the share set up on the NAS already, everything else we do is local to the client (magpie in this case). Some of the commands I list here are run within Terminal.app, although there are alternate (GUI) ways of accessing some of the functions.
    This machine had previously been doing Time Machine backups to a local Firewire disk, and part of the process outlined here is to copy the contents of that disk to the NAS so that further backups build on top of the existing ones. No need to throw away the old backups!
    1. In System Preferences, turn Time Machine off.
    2. Find the MAC address of the machine’s internal Ethernet port:
    $ ifconfig en0 | grep ether
    This should produce a single line of output, such as:
    ether 00:16:cb:af:91:d7
    Even if the network backups will be done using a different port (e.g. AirPort: usually “en1″) the system will use the address of en0 as part of the system identifier.
    In this case the identifier that Time Machine will use is “magpie_0016cbaf91d7″.
    3. Make a new “sparsebundle” on a local disk (NOT the Time Machine disk!). This sparsebundle is a virtual filesystem image which we’ll copy to the NAS, and Time Machine will then access it remotely (that way Time Machine’s not limited by the filesystem features of whatever NAS it’s using: all the funky stuff happens within the sparsebundle). By default sparsebundles can keep growing until they fill up the NAS, but in this scenario we keep other things on the NAS as well as backups, and we’re going to limit the sparsebundle size to 140 GB. We called this one “Backup of magpie” as that’s the default name created by Time Machine, but in fact you can call the volume anything you like.
    $ hdiutil create -size 140g -fs HFS+J -volname "Backup of magpie" magpie_0016cbaf91d7.sparsebundle
    created: /Users/david/magpie_0016cbaf91d7.sparsebundle $
    This Mac Mini hasn’t had things like developer tools loaded: hdiutil comes with the OS. We make the sparsebundle manually so we can impose the size limit, and we do it on a local disk because of a bug that prevents creation of a sparsebundle remotely on the NAS (although they can be used when in place). The sparsebundle doesn’t start at 140 GB: it grows as more data is put in the filesystem inside it, up to a maximum of 140 GB.
    4. If you’re not going to copy the contents of an existing Time Machine disk, skip ahead to step 9.
    5. Mount the sparsebundle:
    $ open magpie_0016cbaf91d7.sparsebundle
    You’ll see “Backup of magpie” appear as a mounted volume in Finder.
    6. Copy the old Time Machine backups to the sparsebundle. In Disk Utility:
    Click on Time Machine disk on the left panel, then select the “Restore” tab:
    1. Drag the local Time Machine volume to the Source field
    2. Drag the sparsebundle volume (”Backup of magpie”) to the Destination field
    3. Select “Erase destination” (possibly not mandatory)
    4. Restore
    This will take a while, depending on how much data is on the drive…
    7. If you selected “Erase destination” in Disk Utility, the volume name will have been copied from the local Time Machine disk. Rename the new volume back to “Backup of magpie” (or whatever name you chose).
    8. Unmount (”eject”) the sparsebundle volume.
    9. Mount the NAS share the sparsebundle will be mounted on (”TMmagpie” in this case). I mount all our shares via AFP, but you can presumably use CIFS also. Once it’s mounted, it will be accessible within Terminal.app as /Volumes/TMmagpie.
    10. Copy the sparsebundle to the share:
    $ rsync -avE /Users/david/magpie_0016cbaf91d7.sparsebundle /Volumes/TMmagpie/.
    Depending on your network (802.11g, 802.11n, 100bT, 1000bT, etc) this can take a long time!
    rsync is smart enough to only copy the new bits of a file, so you can stop and re-run that command if necessary without re-copying everything.
    In the meantime you can go ahead and use the machine. Just don’t turn Time Machine backups back on yet.
    11. If the local copy of the sparsebundle is in an area that will be backed up by Time Machine, remove it before proceeding. We don’t want to double the size of the Time Machine backup for no good reason!
    12. In the Time Machine System Preferences panel, select “Change Disk…”. It will display a list of volumes you can backup to. If the share containing the sparsebundle isn’t listed (you did mount it, right?) it’s probably because it’s not mounted from a Time Capsule or another OS X machine. To show the share in this display you’ll need to have executed the following command in Terminal:
    $ defaults write com.apple.systempreferences TMShowUnsupportedNetworkVolumes 1
    You’ll need to log out and in again for this to have effect (select “Log Out” from the Apple menu: you can Restart, but logging out will do). Now mount TMmagie again, then try Time Machine’s “Change Disk…” again.
    13. Select the share on the NAS (”TMmagpie”) as the new destination for Time Machine backups.
    Time Machine will automatically turn itself back on and schedule a backup to begin in two minutes. If you didn’t populate the sparsebundle with the contents of a local disk, this first backup will be a full backup and can take a very long time (depending on things like your network infrastructure). If you did pre-populate the sparsebundle, this backup will be an incremental backup and shouldn’t take long at all (depending on how much has changed on the machine since you turned Time Machine off in Step 1 of course).
    Once the backup has started, keep going with the remaining steps in this list while the backup is running.
    14. You can now eject the TMmagpie share. Time Machine will automatically mount the sparsebundle file directly (during backups you’ll see “Backup of magpie” mounted).
    15. Unfortunately Spotlight will try to index the contents on the “Backup of magpie” share, which will slow down the backups significantly. To avoid this, as soon as the share is mounted for the first time go to Spotlight’s Privacy panel in System Preferences. Use the ‘+’ button at the bottom, select the “Backup of magpie” share, and Spotlight will then ignore it. If Spotlight has already started indexing it, it should immediately stop and the backup will speed up.
    That’s it. Congratulations! New Time Machine backups should happen every hour, and you can access all the backup files via the usual Time Machine interface.With magpie this has allowed us to disconnect the local 200G Firewire disk previously used for Time Machine backups: this drive was significantly noisier than the Mac Mini itself!
    GOOD LUCK!
    MacBook Pro 2.8 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 4 GB 1067 MHz DDR3 Mac OS X (10.5.6) NetGear ReadyNAS, Linksys Routers,

  • Make time capsule a hard drive

    so frustrated with this time capsule.  I want to make it my hard drive and cannot figure out how to do this......argh

    carrow10 wrote:
    I just bought a time capsule, backed up all my files and cannot figure out how to put my photos on it  PLEASE HELP ready to throw this out!
    Do you mean you want your iphoto library on the TC? That is a very bad idea.. as then there is no backup and your files are on a single hard drive on a backup device which is not warrantied to last more than 1year.. with no access to the hard disk and no repair offered by the manufacturer.
    If you merely want to copy the files to it, just copy them. It is as simple as select the file and paste.
    Here is how to setup iphoto library in this post I just did.. and why it is a bad idea.
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3415120?tstart=0

Maybe you are looking for

  • Safari won't open, always crashes

    crash log, one of several pasted below. any ideas what's going wrong....it will never launch Process: Safari [996] Path: /Applications/Safari.app/Contents/MacOS/Safari Identifier: com.apple.Safari Version: 4.0.2 (5530.19) Build Info: WebBrowser-55301

  • Cant update my iPod touch 4g to iOS 6

    help update my iPod touch 4g it always says iOS 5.1.1 Your Software Is Up To Date Please Help Me Even The iOS 6 Update Is Available

  • Fax number is not picking from the ship to party to send COA

    Hello, To fax COA, output type in delivery is not picking up fax number from customer or from partner function. Condition records are maintained for partner function ship to party and condition records and output determination procedure is also assig

  • New pro

    Its about time for me to get a new macbook. I'm looking at getting a new pro. Either a 13 or 15 inch. Is the intel i5 that much better than the core 2 duo? I do some things with creative suite, imovie, and iweb but thats about it other than standard

  • Update to iTunes 7.7 Release - Now I have a problem.

    I am curious if anyone is having this problem. I updated to iTunes 7.7 release today on my development system (a mistake as I have been chasing this now all evening). The problem I am having is that when I build my app for the device the app installs