Time Machine Restore Help Needed

Hello All,
I replaced my hard drive and restored from Time Machine.
I have a MacBook Pro that just missed the age barrier for Mountain Lion, so I have the latest Lion - 10.7.4.
Now that my laptop is more or less back in shape, I cannot play music in iTunes, the message says can't find originals. I have tried restoring the Music file again, but to no avail.
As well, my Mail is messed up. It has been running for 2 hours now with the message "Importing Mailbox . . ."
Alas, iPhoto cannot locate my pictures.
I need help. When I backed up to Time Machine before all this happened, everything had backed up and was working. I clicked ctrl R to begin the back up.
HELP - I am not sure what to do. I havn't had the heart to check my videos!! As well, my budget spreadsheet in excel was an original document when it was backed up, not it is an 'alias' and I am getting the message that the original cannot be found.
Thanks to all who can offer some guidance - this is way to stressful.
Clint

Well, iPhoto and Mail are back to normal. But for the life of me, the following are still giving grief - ANY SUGGESTIONS would be welcome:
I cannot play music in iTunes, the message says can't find originals
my budget spreadsheet in excel was an original document when it was backed up, not it is an 'alias' and I am getting the message that the original cannot be found.
Clint

Similar Messages

  • Time machine restore help

    I've recently been having issues with my early 2008 black Macbook. I ran the apple HW diagnostics and determined it is a bad hard drive. I went out and bought a new 500GB SATA HD, and attempted to restore my system using a Time Machine backup. I booted into the Leopard Disc that came with my computer, formatted the drive, and ran the Time machine restore. Everything appeared to go fine (took about 2 hours, no error messages). However, after the machine rebooted and attempted to boot into OSX an error similar to this popped up. http://img149.imageshack.us/img149/7792/pict0017lo8.jpg
    Any thoughts as to why this is happening? I don't really want to start over with a clean install, that's why I have Time Machine!
    Other information:
    My computer originally had Leopard, and was upgraded to Snow Leopard.
    I have boot camp setup on my mac for Win 7. (I know this isn't backed up or restored as part of a time machine backup, which I'm O.K. with.)
    Thanks in advance for all your help.

    Any number of possibilities. First, did you prep the drive properly:
    Extended Hard Drive Preparation
    1. Boot from your OS X Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger, Leopard or Snow Leopard.)
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area. If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing. SMART info will not be reported on external drives. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID (for Intel Macs) or APM (for PPC Macs) then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    5. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
    6. Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to several hours depending upon the drive size.
    Any brand new drive should be setup per the above because they usually are configured for use on PCs rather than Macs.
    Second, depends on how you went about the process of restoring your system. Select Mac Help from the Finder's Help menu and search for "time machine." Look for an article specifically about performing a full system restore. Also, see User Tips for Time Machine for help with TM problems. Also you can select Mac Help from the Finder's Help menu and search for "time machine" to locate articles on how to use TM. See also Mac 101- Time Machine.
    What you saw was a kernel panic screen. Panics at startup may be indicative of a hardware problem. You might give this a try:
    How to run hardware diagnostics for an Intel Mac
    Boot from your original OS X Installer Disc One that came with your computer. After the chime press and hold down the "D" key until the diagnostic screen appears. Run the extended tests for a minimum of two or three hours. If any error messages appear note them down as you will need to report them to the service tech when you take the computer in for repair.
    Some "common" error indicators:
    SNS - sensor error
    MEM - memory error
    HDD - hard disk drive error
    MOT - fan error
    To assure the problem isn't with your backup you might consider installing OS X by itself. If all is OK, then you can complete the TM restore using Migration Assistant.

  • ALL Photos missing after Time Machine restore  (help)

    So, I accidently formated the wrong drive while in Windows, (big oops) which gave me the opportunity to take Time Machine for a test drive.
    I put the DVD in, and was able to restore from the TIme Machine drive. Very impressed! Everything came back just as I had left it except - whats this? The default Leopard wallpaper instead of a picture of my son? Huh strange, I thought. Until I noticed I had no photos in iPhoto.
    There seems to be reminents of photos in the iphoto database - the size is 1.3gb instead of the 7gb it used to be. But 0 photos in iPhoto 08.
    I went into iPhoto and choose File/Browse Backups. I selected Nov 8th, which was the last day of my backup and showed all 7000+ photos, and clicked "Restore All". This brought up something odd - a 2nd iPhoto icon in the dock, which showed a progress bar for the restore. Once the restore was completed, I still had a 2nd iPhoto icon the the bar, which was iPhoto running - but no photos in iphoto! I exited the 2nd iphoto, which disappeared, and launched my normal Iphoto icon. Still no photos! (That just seems odd that it would launch iPhoto with a 2nd icon)
    So, I moved my iphoto database, and launch iPhoto in order to create a fresh database - thinking maybe that was the issue. I then did File/Restore again, and went through the whole processes again, including the odd 2nd icon. Still, no photos! And another 1.3gb iphoto database!
    Is it normal for a Time Machine restore to not include your photos? Surely you are not supposed to restore them separately from within Iphoto?
    What do I do now? At this point, everything went very well - except no photos! Which is awful and not at all expected! 7000+ family photos! At least, if I ask iPhoto/Time Machine to restore 'all photos' you would think it would restore 'all photos' - not show a progress bar, and then show me no photos!
    p.s. I just tooked at the iPhoto Library. The 1.3gb is in /Data/ which contains folders 2000-2007, my Events, and thumbnails of all the photos - but no actual photos (the 'Originals' folder is missing).
    I then went back in time, and found the 8gb iPhoto Library database. I supposed I could copy it over manually via Time Machine, and not iPhoto's Restore/TM - but - i'm so far off track of how this should have went I don't know what to think!
    p.s.s. So I did just that - copied the 8gb iPhoto Library manually from TM, and pasted it in place. I help down option, and launch iPhoto, selecting the 8gb library - and BOOM... no photos!
    Something is #$%# up here.
    Message was edited by: metzen79

    This is what it says in the help file:
    Reverting to a previous Mac OS X version
    If you’ve used Time Machine to back up your computer, you can easily revert to a previous version of Mac OS X if you’re experiencing trouble after installing an update.
    IMPORTANT: Reverting to the previous version of Mac OS X will erase any additions or changes you’ve made to the files on your computer after installing the new version of Mac OS X. To save new or revised files, copy them onto a different disk or back them up using Time Machine before you follow these instructions. Use Time Machine only if you’re reverting to a previous version of Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard), since Time Machine is not available with Mac OS X 10.4 or earlier.
    To revert to a previous version of Mac OS X:
    Insert the disc you used to install the new version of Mac OS X, and double-click the Install Mac OS X icon.
    In the Installer, choose Utilities > Restore System From Backup.
    In the Restore Your System dialog, click Continue.
    Select your Time Machine backup volume.
    Select the Time Machine backup you want to restore. To restore your computer to the state it was in before you installed a new version of Mac OS X, choose the most recent backup.
    Follow the onscreen instructions.
    If you backed up any individual files as described under the Important message above, you can restore them now. If you backed them up using Time Machine, recover them using the Time Machine application. (You’ll find the Time Machine application in the Dock or in the Applications folder.)
    Hope this helps
    Denisimo

  • I need time machine restore help

    Can someone please tell me what the screen should look like when I do a complete restore onto a new hard drive? The blue candy cane bar is spinning. There is no percent complete or hours until completion showing. It ran all night. 500G hard drive. I think it could possibly take 20 hours but I don't want to let it run if it is virtually locke

    First I would like to say thank you for replying to my question. After 24 hours of the blue candy cane bar just spinning and spinning I decided to open the disk utility option that was being offered. I noticed that the same number of files and gigs were still on the hard drive. I figure it was NOT doing anything. So I opted for a restart and held command R again and tried it with a slightly older time machine file. This time it started right up and now I see the progress bar. It has 7 hours left to go. Hoping this will actually work. It will save me so many hours trying to drag files from my old hard drive. BUT I am going to mark that you answered my question just because you replied and I am certain that if I had not discovered this on my own you would have known the answer. So thanks for the help. (editing so that hopefully it will let me click the correct support acknowledgement)

  • Time Machine Resurrection Help Needed

    Hello, all,
    I just had a hard drive fail on my mac mini, running Leopard Server (fully updated). I swapped the hard drives, and recovered everything from my Time machine backup. However, since the recovery, in the system log I seem to have a continually running process and I'm not sure how to fix it or shut it off. Here's the message I see:
    Sep 29 18:44:56 servername com.apple.launchd[1] (com.apple.wikid[85677]): Exited with exit code: 1
    Sep 29 18:44:56 servername com.apple.launchd[1] (com.apple.wikid): Throttling respawn: Will start in 6 seconds
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: Traceback (most recent call last):
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/bin/twistd", line 21, in <module>
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: run()
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/lib/python/twisted/scripts/twistd.py", line 27, in run
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: app.run(runApp, ServerOptions)
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/lib/python/twisted/application/app.py", line 379, in run
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: runApp(config)
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/lib/python/twisted/scripts/twistd.py", line 23, in runApp
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: _SomeApplicationRunner(config).run()
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/lib/python/twisted/application/app.py", line 156, in run
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: self.preApplication()
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/lib/python/twisted/scripts/twistdunix.py", line 203, in preApplication
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: self.config['prefix'], self.config['nodaemon'])
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/lib/python/twisted/scripts/twistdunix.py", line 113, in startLogging
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: logFile = app.getLogFile(logfilename or 'twistd.log')
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/lib/python/twisted/application/app.py", line 410, in getLogFile
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: os.path.dirname(logPath))
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/lib/python/twisted/python/logfile.py", line 113, in _init_
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: BaseLogFile._init_(self, name, directory, defaultMode)
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: File "/usr/share/caldavd/lib/python/twisted/python/logfile.py", line 26, in _init_
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]:
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: assert os.path.isdir(self.directory)
    Sep 29 18:45:07 servername com.apple.wikid[85679]: AssertionError
    ...and then it repeats. Aside from guessing that it has something to do with the wiki settings (Maybe? I tried turning the wiki off, no change) I don't know what to do about this.
    Any suggestions would be appreciated.

    Well, iPhoto and Mail are back to normal. But for the life of me, the following are still giving grief - ANY SUGGESTIONS would be welcome:
    I cannot play music in iTunes, the message says can't find originals
    my budget spreadsheet in excel was an original document when it was backed up, not it is an 'alias' and I am getting the message that the original cannot be found.
    Clint

  • Do I need to remove Bootcamp before Time Machine Restore?

    Hello - anyone familiar with this scenario.
    I have used TIME MACHINE from the very first day I had my iMac.  So it was started almost immediately after the initial boot of a brand new iMac case I ever needed to restore my Mac to that initial Day 1 state.
    That day has come, but it's now two years, and in that time I have installed BOOTCAMP, Parallels and Windows 7.  That process created another partition, and created the required 'links' between my OSX and Windows via Parallels etc.
    So my question is this - can I do a 'Restore from Time Machine' over the top of the new partioned set up of my iMac OR  or will it be now totally confused because of the changes I have made to my system in that time, and do I firstly need to remove Windows, Bootcamp, and erase the partitions I created back to one.
    So in summary - will Time Machine do this when it restores, or do I need to do it before I restore?
    I also have a CARBON COPY CLONE from Day 1 too.  Am I better using that instead - and if so, same question - will i need to remove Windows, and my Bootcamped partion first?
    (My system is iMac late 2012 still running OSX Mountain Lion if that makes any difference)
    Thanks
    OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.4), i7 / 3TB Fusion Drive / 24GB Ram

    popsynic wrote:
    Hi - thanks for responding
    "Is Parallels using the BC partition as a VM, or is it a separate VM with its own virtual disk?"
    I don't know - basically I have a BOOTCAMP partition and Windows is installed on that (using these instructions from the Parallels website)  I can then either open up Windows from in OSX Moutain Lion while keeping my mac running (and windows will run in its own little window - but within OSX.  OR I can also choose to boot dircetly wi windows when I tuen on my MAC - and then it runs independently of my OSX.
    You are using the BC Windows and running it as VM. There is no separate VM with virtual disk.
    "Are you planning to erase the internal drive(s)?"
    I wasn't sure  - I want to restore my iMac like it was on the day I had it, before I partitoned BOOTCAMP and installed windows.  So my question is, will the TIME MACHINE restore get rid of WINDOWS and the BOOTCAMP partition for me as part of its restore - or do i have to that, and then restore using Time Machine
    It is much simpler to run BC Assistant and use the last option - "Remove Windows". It is a bit cleaner.
    "If the backup on TM which started on Day 1 has continued as you have made changes, including BC/Windows/Parallels, it has continued to backup OS X and partition information. I suggest you backup Windows using Windows Backup to a separate external drive formatted as NTFS, and also consider Winclone or CampTune for a OS X compatible BC backup, if you run into any issues."
    As above, I am not bothered about keeping Windows or the BOOTCAMP partition, I want to resore my iMac to the DAY 1 status - when I did my first full Time Machine backup - which was before I created a Bootcamp partition or installed Windows.
    I suggest removing Windows via BCA and backing up to Time Machine. You will keep you OS X intact and keep all your files on the OS X side.

  • Reactivate software needed after Time Machine Restore?

    So I'm getting ready to upgrade the HD in my MBP and I am going to try the time machine restore feature (hopefully) to reload the new HD to exact status of old HD. From what I've read this is pretty easy to do. What I can't find in my searches is if all the apps on my HD will need to be reactivate after this procedure.
    Once I restore the new HD does all the software need to be reactivated? I have a ton of apps that I have no idea where the serial #'s are and would be screwed if I had to reactivate them. Or does the restore to the new HD work seemlessly so that it's as if I didn't even swap HDs.

    The only 'problem' I've ever had after a restore was with the MS Office for Mac suite 2011. It required me to either re-enter my activation code or sign-on to my Office 365 account (I did the latter).
    Never had a problem with Adobe products, though. I can't guarantee that you won't, of course, but I've personally never had a problem with Adobe products.
    Clinton

  • IMac freezes during 10.10.1 install, needs full-on Time Machine Restore.

    I failed to use Disk Utility to Verify/Repair permissions before the 10.10 -> 10.10.1 upgrade on a 27" iMac (early 2009, first 27").
    The computer restarts and partway through the grey-screen with progress bar, the iMac simply, stops.
    I eventually have to power down, and always the same stop.
    I boot into the Recovery area, where Disk Utility Repair Permissions first said the drive was un-fixable, then ran fine and made repairs and said it was fine.
    I then had to restore the entire machine from Time Machine since it WOULD NOT recover enough to boot.
    Time Machine restore was amazing.  Many hours, but it restored the iMac to the previous state from the day before, including what e-mails were open.
    I figured all the diagnostics had "shaken up" the drive enough to try 10.10.1 again, but the same result.  Partway through grey-screen with progress bar, permanent freeze.
    Needed 2nd Time Machine restore.
    Now I'm afraid to try again.
    Is that a dead sector on the hard drive?  On a system file that's never used?  So confusing.  I wish a scan could find it and mark it as unusable.
    5 year old Mac drive though.  Could be getting Tired.
    Thoughts welcome.

    I boot into the Recovery area, where Disk Utility Repair Permissions first said the drive was un-fixable, then ran fine and made repairs and said it was fine.
    To be clear, use Disk Utility's Repair Disk function, not Repair Disk Permissions. Once it finishes, back up that disk's contents to another device, preferably two or more, and then discard it. If you are concerned about securing its contents, physically destroy it first.
    A permanent repair for hard disk corruption does not exist. Firmware contained within the hard disk drive already automatically maps bad sectors "unusable" as you desire. The problem is that as a disk ages and is subject to the inevitable environmental abuse that occurs with all consumer electronics, the number of bad sectors will increase exponentially with time. Replace it.

  • Need to re-authorize iTunes after Time Machine restore -bug?-

    After a ganked iTunes/Quicktime update I had to use Time Machine to restore my Mac.
    After trying to re-sync my iPod with iTunes I was informed that this machine was no longer authorized despite it being the same machine.
    I had to re-authorize the machine through iTunes and now have 2 authorized Macs even though it's the same machine and I can't de-authorize the "old version" since it just de-authorizes what you're using i.e. the "new version"
    My worry is that if I have to carry out further Time Machine restores then my 5 authorized slots will fill up and then I'll have to de-authorize all computers which you can only do once a year.
    Has anyone experienced anything similar and I assume this is a bug?

    Yes I've seen that and yes, it's a case of sending Mac OS X Feedback .

  • How do I know which id to delete and insure time machine restore?

    I had a glitch on my computer of the screen going black at random. I also had a recall on my imac for the segate drive which was replaced once. I brought it to the apple store after a week then determined there was no recall on my new drive and reinstalled Mt Lion to get rid of the black screen issue. Now here is the problem i got home and plugged in my ext drive for a time machine restore. I restored everthing using migrate assitant except the applications and desktop. I was asked to create another user name for the transfer. I don't understand why i had to do this so just slightly changed my id name. I now need to find the desktop data and can't find it under either names. I searched the drive direct and found the  info is there but migrate assitant doesn't show it. I tryed to restore back some other files but it was me to changed the name of the restore using migrate assitant again. How many ids do I need?  How do I blow way the 2nd id without gettting rid of my backup on the ext drive. I am so confussed now and can't figure out which  admin id has the info and which doesn't .  I don't even know if the info made it to the imac hard drive.  help!!!  

    I had a glitch on my computer of the screen going black at random. I also had a recall on my imac for the segate drive which was replaced once. I brought it to the apple store after a week then determined there was no recall on my new drive and reinstalled Mt Lion to get rid of the black screen issue. Now here is the problem i got home and plugged in my ext drive for a time machine restore. I restored everthing using migrate assitant except the applications and desktop. I was asked to create another user name for the transfer. I don't understand why i had to do this so just slightly changed my id name. I now need to find the desktop data and can't find it under either names. I searched the drive direct and found the  info is there but migrate assitant doesn't show it. I tryed to restore back some other files but it was me to changed the name of the restore using migrate assitant again. How many ids do I need?  How do I blow way the 2nd id without gettting rid of my backup on the ext drive. I am so confussed now and can't figure out which  admin id has the info and which doesn't .  I don't even know if the info made it to the imac hard drive.  help!!!  

  • Is it possible to boot or Time Machine restore from an external Thunderbolt disk drive?

    (There are several questions - search for "?".)
    I purchased a Seagate Backup Plus for Mac Desktop Drive 3 TByte with default USB 3.0 interface, and also acquired the Seagate Thunderbolt Adapter for Backup Plus Desktop Drives and Thunderbolt cable.
    I do a redundant backup to the Seagate Drive using both Carbon Copy Cloner (nightly) and Time Machine (hourly) using its Thunderbolt adapter.  BTW:  One never knows when Time Machine will choke - see discussion titled, "UPDATED: Serious Time Machine bug on Mountain Lion", which I had; Rest In Peace Pondini (James Lewis Pond).
    Booting from the external Seagate Backup Plus via Thunderbolt inteface from System Preferences -> Startup Disk:
    I select the Time Machine OS X, 10.8.5 Startup Disk (Thunderbolt attached drive), click Restart, confirm my choice, the computer reboots, however, it reboots from the internal Macintosh HD OS X, 10.8.5, NOT the selected external Thunderbolt drive.  The SSD drive was used as the Startup Drive, not the selected external Time Machine volume as indicated by the display free disk space command (df(1)) and seeing that the Macintosh HD OS X, 10.8.5 volume is mounted as root.  That is very deceptive in that both the internal and external drives will appear in the same manner from a GUI point of view!  OS X doesn't even inform me that it did not boot off the selected volume.  This is the first half of the problem, that is, Is it possible to boot from an external Thunderbolt disk drive?  In my case, the answer is deceptively No.  Can anybody else boot off a Thuderbolt attached disk drive?  Note that if I remove the Thunderbolt adapter, and attach the drive via its USB 3.0 cable, the MBP boots off the external Seagate Backup Plus just fine, as is expected.
    Booting from the external Seagate Backup Plus via Thunderbolt inteface from boot-time "Option - Select startup disk" method:
    When I restart the MBP using the startup Option key to select the startup volume, the externally connected Seagate drive ONLY SHOWS UP if it is attached with the USB 3.0 cable, not when it is attached with via the Thunderbolt interface.  Can anyone else boot off a Thunderbolt drive with the startup Option key sequence?  At least the MBP doesn't deceive me in this case - I know right away that the external Thunderbolt drive is not an option when connected as such.
    Time Machine restore from the external Seagate Backup plus via Thunderbolt interface from the "command-R - Recovery Parition" method:
    After booting from the recovery partition, I attempt to perform a Time Machine restore from the Thunderbolt connected Seagate Backup drive.  When Time Machine attempts to present me with a viable backup Time Machine volume, the external Thunderbolt drive is never offered as an option.  So I switch the Time Machine volume to use its USB 3.0 interface, and then Time Machine displays that drive as an option, and the MBP proceeds with the restoration as expected.  The interesting thing to note is that while booted in the recovery partition via the Thuderbolt cable, the MBP Disk Utility may be selected, and the Thunderbolt attached drive may be operated on just fine.  Can anybody else restore their MBP using Time Machine and the Recovery Partition via the Thunderbolt interface?
    This is also a big problem for me in that I am forced to restore my MBP via Carbon Copy Cloner using the USB 3.0 interface, because I cannot even boot off that volume's Thunderbolt interface.  Of course, the option may be that I could use yet another eternal USB 3.0 drive, boot from it, and then use Carbon Copy Cloner to restore the Macintosh HD via the aforementioned drive connected by a Thunderbolt cable, but that is less than ideal and not elegant, so I'm not going there.
    Another side issue is that the commercially available program, TechTool Pro 7's eDrive, which I installed on the Time Machine volume, will not boot off that eDrive as advertised, but I won't got through those steps here, because that would be beyond the scope of this issue, however, I must say, It does not work either when the Time Machine volume is connected via the Thunderbolt interface, but works just fine when connected via the USB 3.0 interface.

    If this helps anybody else make a decision about whether to consider Apple because of Apple's superior customer service:
    Apple sells this entire line of drives right in their store, from 1TB to 4TB.  I spent 1 and 1/2 hours, yesterday, confirming that  the 3TB model IS NOT 100% Thunderbolt compliant.  A MBP cannot boot, nor can it Time Machine restore from this drive, though EVERYTHING about the drive is normal.
    Apple's South Coast Plaza store management had at least two responses to me personally about how to proceed:
    1.  Buy a different drive from another drive manufacturer, and to attempt to return the drive to COSTCO.  A lead genius suggested going with GTech drives, for instance.
    2.  Wait for Seagate to fix their problem.
    I told Apple management in the store that the drive is advertised as Mac Compatible (see  picture) and that it is advertised as being a Thunderbolt drive (see picture).  I pressed management that my purchasing decsion to get the best possible MBP Retina was based on the availablity of Inexpensive Devises (raID), and that not having this complete compatibility is a show-stopper for my needs, and that I wanted a refund.  Their response?  They needed to talk with "Merchendising" to see if they are on or off the hook for these kind of 3rd party assertions, and would get back to me.
    I am not holding my breath.
    Note:  I do not hold this against the Geniuses that helped me, nor against the management I've dealt with, nor the upper level engineers that I've corresponded with through Apple Care - their problem solving skills were helpful - although I could have arrived at similar conclusions given enough $$$.  (For instance, try a Lacie TB drive and see if that works - we did, and it did not work.  Or, we have a different TB cable and a different TB adapter, let's try those - we did, and it did not work.)  I blame myself for not doing enough homework before going with Apple's solutions.

  • Can Time Machine restore to a new internal HDD?

    hi all, i've got a 1tb external drive that's exclusively used by Time Machine. the 1tb drive is connected to my 500gb mac mini. i've been running time machine for 6 months now daily, i just wanted to know if it was backing up everything on my 500gb drive or not. how can i check that it's working properly?
    also, does anyone know how i'd go about restoring my mac mini in case i had to replace the 500gb hdd? can time machine restore everything if i needed it to? if i bought a new HDD tomorrow for example, how could i get my system running back to where it was running today with all of the current settings and files etc?  is there any way for me to check that Time Machine will actually restore OS X, all my videos, music and my work should the HDD actually die?
    is there an apple link i can read?
    thanks for any help.

    To answer your question about replacing a hard drive and recovering what was on your old one ...
    Yes, Time Machine was designed for that. You may have one of two scenarios:
    (1) Your hard drive is replaced by the Apple Store or another Apple repair shop, in which case they usually restore it with the operating system you had before and configure it so it has a new system with no users set up; the first time it starts up it runs Setup Assistant. When Setup Assistant runs, you select the option to restore from a Time Machine backup. It will then automatically restore your entire hard drive to the newly installed one. Everything will be just as it was with the old drive. Exceptions: you MAY have to enter user keys for software like MS-Office and Adobe Photoshop. and you MAY have to reinstall your printers and scanners.
    (2) If the hard drive is replaced but no operating system or anything is put on it, you need to boot from your Install-OS-DVD and install a new operating system on the new drive. Then, on the first reboot, Setup Assistant runs and you can follow the instructions from (1) above.
    A good informational site about Time Machine is here: http://pondini.org/TM/Home.html
    How do you know that your Time Machine backup is a good one? You can peruse through all the backups by running Time Machine and manually inspect that the files in those key folders (photos, music etc.) are all there and have the right sizes. You can "test recover" selected folders to a scratch location just to check that it works. I suggest you obtain another external drive and use it to make a "clone" of your internal drive using SuperDuper or Carbon Copy Cloner. This is like a second backup, a failsafe in case, say, your Time Machine drive were to fail. This is not unheard of, since a power failure could cause both your internal drive and Time Machine drives to crash at the same time. The "clone" should be unplugged and stored separately to avoid this issue. You can update the clone, say once a week or once a month.

  • Time Machine Restore problem

    Hey all
    I got a problem restoring from my time machine backups, what happened was, i reinstalled leopard thing the migration utility was the thing to use, so i went and reinstalled and did that but it wasn't what i wanted, so i looked it up and learnt it was restore i wanted.
    So i went back, reformated my hard drive and clicked the restore choice from the drop down menu in the leopard boot dvd, it found the time machine hard drive, but when i click it, it doesn't find any backups, acts like there are none on there, but when i look in disk utility it still has all the used space from the backups.
    So now i've reinstalled leopard and the harddrive is there and i can see the backups all sitting there, but when i go to restore it can't see them.
    Does anyone know why? i really need to fix this because their are important files on the time machine and i needed my comp restored.
    If anyone could help that'd be great!

    I'm having a problem restoring an Address Book card. If I have Finder up when I go to Time Machine it looks and acts as I'd expect. If I Address Book is my active window when I go to Time Machine, for some reason the only active option for a backup is "Now". It doesn't allow me to go to any previous backup. When I search for the card that was recently deleted, it doesn't appear. That seems consistent with the fact that Now is the only copy that seems available in Time Machine, but any ideas why I don't have access to earlier versions?

  • Time Machine restore from WD my book live duo

    Dear all and especially anyone out there who may be able to help me.
    I have a MacBook Pro with Mountain Lion, a WD mybook live duo 3/6tb on the LAN, all wired.
    It has been backing up through Time Machine fine until my MacBook crashed earlier this week so I have a fairly
    recent snapshot of my MacBook before the crash.
    I wanted to restore, after a Hard Disk erase which seemed necessary, from Time Machine but I couldn't make it work
    as it kept asking me for user names and passwords of the NAS (which I entered of course) only
    to result in error meesages saying the 'share' didn't exist. (Despite the fact that it does immediately
    recognise the backup and location on the NAS.)
    WD support advised me to first reinstall OSX ML and then use the regular Time Machine
    functionality to restore my Mac.
    - there is no option to fully restore your Mac through the wonderful TimeMachine time travel
    functionality. I tried to restore my Macintosh HD back to a recent time point but that resulted in
    nothing much (or nothing at all, I don't know). I don't see my old stuff, I still see a kind of vanilla
    OSX ML installation.
    - using the restore functionality (CMD-R during startup) and the time machine restore option,
    results in the same nagging for names and passwords and error messages that the share
    doesn't exist.
    WD support couldn't tell me what the share name (and possibly password) would be for where it stores Time Machine backup
    files (it doesn't show up in the list of shares when you look in the WD dashboard) and that makes sense to me as when you
    tell Time Machine to use the NAS, it doesn't ask you for anything in terms of shares or passwords either.
    So here I am: with probably a very good and recent complete backup at my disposal but no way of restoring it to my Mac.
    So all I had and trusted to Time Machine is lost.
    Is anyone out here who can help me? Anyone with a similar experience and hopefully solution? (That I can understand....I am a Mac user! :-) )
    I would be enormously grateful!
    Greetings from Amsterdam,
    Eric

    Hello Eric, not sure if this helps or is exactly what you are looking for as I am unfamiliar with the NAS issue you have.  However, I recently restored my computer from Mavericks back to Snow Leopard using my WD mybook.  At first I was unable to use the WD mybook for restore, as is was not recognized by the computer after the menu came up from pressing "command R" during start up.  I attributed this to the WD software requiring a password to access the drive.  This is the same password that you (anyone who owns a WD mybook) have to supply each time you want to use time machine to back up files.  There is a simple remedy I found.  You need to go to your applcations and select "WD SmartWare," type in your password, then select the "Settings" tab at the upper right hand conner.  Then select "Set up drive."  On the right side of the window there is the "Set Security Options," sign in using your password in the box displayed under "password," then select "Remove Security."  The last step would be to save the security setting, and you are all set to use your WD mybook without a password for full system restoration.  So when you restart your computer and hold (or as I found press many times) the "command R" to access the restore window at start up, you can select restore from time machine, and have your WD mybook now appear in the timemachine device window, as the device is not password protected anymore.  Once your computer is restored you can follow the same steps outlined above to reinstate your password for your WD mybook.  Best of luck,
    Marc

  • Apple Modem will not answer after Time Machine Restore

    After restoring from a Time Machine backup the Apple External Modem no longer answers incoming [fax] calls. I verified all modem/fax settings - they are good and the same as before the restore. The Modem Status in the Menu Bar doesn't indicate "ringing..." when the line is ringing and the Fax no longer answers.
    Opening the Console I see these errors repeating endlessly-
    9/15/08 10:09:10 AM com.apple.service_helper[1271] com.apple.efax: Already loaded
    9/15/08 10:09:10 AM [0x0-0x15015].com.apple.systempreferences[155] No matching processes were found
    9/15/08 10:09:27 AM com.apple.efax[1274] /usr/bin/fax: line 537: cd: /var/spool/fax: No such file or directory
    I believe the fax app is supposed to create this dir, but I created the dir in /var/log/ as follows:
    drwxr-xr-x 2 root wheel 68 Sep 15 10:33 fax
    Makes no difference, rebooted, still makes no difference, ran disk utility to see if it would change permissions, no it didn't - still getting the errors, so there's something else that's also missing after a restore, or the error message is erroneous since the dir now exists.
    It appears a Time Machine Restore - doesn't restore all that's needed for the fax subsystem to work. I thought the restore was supposed to completely restore the volume to previous operating state?
    Any help on this would be great, I now have no incoming FAX - one of the main jobs of this Mini - thx - KR

    By the way, it's running OS X 10.5.4

Maybe you are looking for

  • Mac Mini 120 hz refresh rate?

    I've had my mac mini hooked up to my samsung 3d tv since i bought it. it's only been outputting to the screen at 60 hz. I want to be able to use 120 hz, just cause my tv has it and i do have 3d video files that do play, but want to see if they would

  • Payment Voucher Attached to F110_IN_AVIS

    Dear All I need to attach customize Payment Voucher form to attach F110_IN_AVIS (Payment Advice). Is it possible while running F-58 and F110. Thanks Madhawa

  • Access point strange spectrum

    Hello. I have 5 APs 3602E. They are all enabled for a/b/g/n standards. When I check client statistics I can see different clients using 2.4nGHz protocol and 5nGHz protocol. But if I take radio analyzer I dont see any 5GHz networks available((( Moreov

  • System Preferences crashes

    System Preferences crashes everytime I click on "Security", "Keyboard & Mouse", and "Sound". I got a Mighty Mouse for Christmas, and I need to change the settings of it. Everytime I click on "Keyboard & Mouse" it crashes. Can anybody help me? Thanks!

  • Oracle identity federation 10g--error while login with single sign

    Hi... I installed oif10g using microsoft ad2003.now i am integrating with salesforce.com to provide single sign on...but while signing authentication is failed...so for that we need to search for assertion which will be under federation-mssg.log.. bu