Windows seems to be searching Mac partition before updating

This is a new problem I've had since bootcamp 3.1 came out, with the HFS+ support came the possibility to scan the Mac partition.
This understandably is taking forever when tasks that scan my computer occur as HFS+ read times are aweful in windows (not to mention the huge extra space to be scanned) Now I can leave out the Mac HDD when scanning for virii however when windows update runs it seems to be scanning the mac partition even though it's not indexed, is there any way to prevent this?

Problem resolved itself.

Similar Messages

  • Windows formatted iPod on a Mac - how to update?

    I am new to Mac (finally). I have a Windows formatted iPod (video). Therefore my iPod update button is grayed out. Is there a way to reformat my iPod to Mac? If no, what problems will this cause down the road?
    Macbook   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

    To reformat your iPod for Mac, you need to Restore it on the Mac. (This will erase it entirely.)
    You cannot do a software update on a Windows formatted iPod from the Mac, which is why the Update button is greyed out.

  • Windows Media Player plugin was working fine before updating to 4 and now i've tried every single advice found in here and still can get it to work even though it is enabled on the add-ons page. Any new trick to try?

    worked fine with 3.6
    updated to 4
    tried uninstall/install plugin
    .dll downloads
    disable/enable different plugins
    next step is format?

    I seem to have fixed it by putting <div  class="clearfloat"></div> after the navigation bar?

  • Windows updates not working because it extract patches on Mac partition first., Windows updates not working because it extract patches on Mac partition first.

    I have installed BootCamp 5.1 and Windows updates not working because it extract files on Mac partition before installation. Is there any workaround for same ?

    To replicate this issue - Try to download .net framework 4.5 from microsoft website and than run that setup on windows partition.
    Before installation. it will first extract all the binaries to a other drivers, since in my case other primary drive is E which is a Mac partition so it always give me an error while extractiing and therefore setup is not able to execute propely.
    Let me try to get the screen shot of error and send it here.

  • Boot camp can't view Mac partition

    Hi guys. So heres my problem. I have a late 2012 27" Imac with a 3TB fusion drive, and I have boot camp successfully installed with Windows 8 (currently).
    So my problem is when i'm booted into Windows, I cannot view my Mac partition at all. From what I understand, Apple have included HFS drivers which should enable me to at least view my Mac HDD when booted into windows, and the drivers are installed properly, however I still cannot even see my Mac HDD.
    I have searched far and wide for possible solutions or even an explination as to why this isn't working for me, with no prevail. From what I understand, I think it might be the fusion drive which is preventing the reading capability. All I know is that i've tried almost everything (MacDrive etc.) and nothing works for me, I just ultimately want to be able to access my Mac HDD when im booted into Windows.
    I have also tried on Windows 7 but I end up with the same problem.
    CAN SOMEONE PLEASE HELP! THIS IS DRIVING ME CRAZY!
    Thanks guys, any help will be appreciated!

    I believe that you have already answered your own question without realizing it.
    You indicated that yoru MacOS partition is on a Fusion Drive.  If that is the case, then I do not believe that it is supported by Boot Camp, and you won't be able to access it.  If you double check teh Boot Camp documentation, I believe it should clarify that.  Fusion Drives are new technology from Apple (within the last year or so) and the technology is not really available to third parties yet, so other drivers like MacDrive, or HFS+ For Windows from Paragon won't have the ability to access the Fustion Drive until they either license the technology from Apple, ot attempt to reverse engineer it for themselves...

  • IMac running on Mac OS 10.5.8 & Windows XP wont boot from Mac OS

    I have an iMac running Mac OS 10.5.8 and Windows XP (ServicePack 3) on Boot Camp 2.2. This configuration has worked for me perfectly for the past 2 years up until recently. From nowhere, the system is now refusing to boot to Mac OS but boots into Windows XP without any problem.
    I have tried to repair the Boot Camp 2.2 in Windows XP via the repair/update option from the Boot Camp installation but its giving a fail message;
    The installer has encountered an unexpected error installingthis package. The error code is 2727.
    I have also tried to verify and repair the Macintosh HD partition using the Disk Utility but its giving me the following error message;
    On verify disk
    Invalid Sibling link
    Volume check failed
    ERROR: Filesystem verify or repair failed.
    I could repartition and start all over again but there are some files and emails I need to retrieve from the Mac partition before I delete and repartition.
    Is there any shareware software that I can install on theWindows XP partition and be able to access/retrieve my files in the Mac partition?

    you can't repair Mac OS X from Windows.
    What you need to do and realize is that Disk Utility is not good enogh or reliable enough and you need 3rd party disk repair utility.
    Or just restore Mac HFS from backups.
    You may want to install Mac OS on another external hard drive
    Recover the files there - probably best to have two partitions.
    you should have already created multiple backup sets: clone type and TimeMachine
    Disk Warrior is $90 or there is TechTool Pro 6 for almost same
    Cloning is easy enough either from Mac OS X DVD Disk Utility Restore or from another hard drive.
    Cloning as a Backup Strategy
    Carbon Copy Cloner
    WinClone VMware HDD Upgrade
    MPG - How To Guides - How to clone a volume
    SuperDuper

  • Installing windows 7 over XP with 3 partitions

    On my macbook I used the following method to install xp via bootcamp and obtain 3 partitions (windows, shared fat32 data, and mac partitions). http://forums.creativecow.net/thread/246/114
    Now I'd like to install windows 7 while keeping my other 2 partitions. I'll have to do a clean install since upgrading is not supported. However, since I used a cryptic method previously to install XP, will a regular clean install work, or will something like the boot record get messed up?
    Thank you.

    Hi sblive,
    I admit that I haven't tried such partitioning myself (no need for me with a Mac Pro ).
    Nonetheless, some ideas to throw in here:
    First of: backup everything you need later (OSX, shared DATA files, Windows)
    For your Windows XP you can use the "Windows Easy Transfer" as described here http://www.winsupersite.com/win7/win7_upgrade.asp
    Most likely you should delete the DATA partition and assign the space back to your OSX partition (backup the files form that partition before doing...).
    After that you maybe then can use the BootCamp Assistant to delete to the Windows XP partition and revert back fully to one single OSX partition.
    If this does not work, you can use the following:
    1) boot your Mac from your OSX 10.6 install DVD
    2) choose your language and then 'ignore' (cancel) the installation
    3) from the Top Menu (Utilities) start Disk Utility (DU)
    4) in DU click on your harddisk (not any partition) in the left pane (the first item listed)
    5) in the right pane use the 'Partition'-Tab
    6) click to highlight on the ex-Windows partition you want to delete
    7) click on the small '-' Button at the bottom
    That should delete your former Windows partition
    After that's done successfully
    8) Drag the partition separator line until it encompasses the entire drive and then select apply.
    9) Quit Disk Utility
    10) reboot your Mac from your harddisk.
    When you are back at one single OSX partition, you should be able to simply use the instructions you linked to again to first install WIndows 7 and then make the shared DATA partition again.
    Since Windows 7 (and Vista btw.) don't use a boot.ini anymore you might have to use EasyBCD http://neosmart.net/dl.php?id=1 to make the neccessary cahanges to the WIndows 7 bootloader.
    Good luck
    Stefan

  • Mac partition corrupted, how to copy files over to external...

    I have a circa 2008 black macbook running OSX 10.6.4 and running bootcamp 3.1 with windows 7 and somehow my mac partition is corrupted beyond repair (according to disk utility in snow leopard install disk). Ican still boot into windows 7 and I can still access my files from the mac partition while in windows so my questions are:
    1. can I copy all my files to an external drive via windows (I tried just drag and drop but states I need certain permissions to do so). If so, how do I change permissions on the files or elevate my copying status so the alerts go away?
    2. If i can copy my files to an external, what files, if any, should I not copy over as to prevent the corrupted files from coming back up?
    3. If I wipe my mac partition and reinstall OSX, will there be any issues running boot camp? (will my windows 7 still boot)
    3. if there are no issues with the first three questions (assuming they are answered in my favor) can I copy the files back to my newly installed OSX partition without any issues?
    Basically I need to know how I can save my files from being deleted when I reinstall OSX (and no I do not have time machine set up)

    Set up a Mac OS X volume on your external drive and boot from there.
    Maybe you need Alsoft Disk Warrior (MacIntouch: Hard Drives lately)
    Install OS X - shrink a partition so you have 20-30GB.
    Erasing the HFS+ should be safe.
    Use SuperDuper to clone OS X in the future, along with using TimeMachine (different drives or partitions) which are bootable OS X. Or Carbon Copy Cloner.
    OS X DVD Disk Utility: Restore can copy a partition to external, and attempt repair of your OS X partition.

  • Mac partition dont work on my dual boot imac

    Since some days my mac partition wont start up. The windows partition works fine. Recovery dont work. Not even in save mode. I have upgraded my mac to lion from the original snow leopard install. al worked fine until some days ago. No rinstall with the original disks or restore/repare. Starting up with the snow leopard dvd the screen shows disk utityties but selecting them takes forever. already tried diferent startup posibilities (puschin different keys) but nothing helps. I dont need to recover the old installation, i have everyting in backup, but want to reinstall at least my mac os. Anyone? I suspect a automated disk utility in windows to have damaged my mac partition. My Imac is 2 years old.
    Roger

    It sounds like the TV you are plugging it into, can't handle the 1280x1024 resolution. You may just have to deal with the 1024x768 res.

  • New Hard Drive, Mac partition cloned and boots fine, but I can't seem to get my BOOTCAMP (windows) partition to boot!  Any ideas?

    Hello all!
    I got a new hard drive for my Mac Book Pro and an enclosure so I could clone the old partitions on to the new drive.
    So I...
    Put the new hard drive in the enclosure.
    Booted up off an install disk and ran disk utility.
    Copied the Mac and Bootcamp partitions over to the new drive that was connected VIA USB.
    Turned off the computer, took the old hard drive out and put it in the enclosure.
    Put the new hard drive in the Mac Book Pro.
    Booted into Mac OSX with no problem.
    When I rebooted held down the option key to boot into the windows side, it didn't show up as an option.
    When I went back into the Mac side, I loaded Disk Utility and saw that I had the Mac partition, the BOOTCAMP partition, and a bunch of unallocated space.  When I went into the System Preferences and set the target boot drive to the BOOTCAMP partition and restarted, I got some crazy error about there not being any bootable info on it.
    That's where I am at.  I have found other posts with people who are having the same problem, but I have yet to find a solution that doesn't involve me buying some 3rd party software.  I know it has something to do with (what is called in Microsoft world) the Master Boot Record, but I don't know how to modify that to reflect that the BOOTCAMP partition is a bootable logical drive.  I remember in MS DOS land there was some command line FDSK /something command that you would run (I think it was /MBR) to reset the MBR.  To me though, all of these terms are shadowy figures in the Ether.
    What do I do???
    -Ricardo
    p.s.  I read somewhere to boot off the windows 7 disk and run the system repair tools. I tried that and no change.

    I got it. It CAN be done. At least on 10.6
    How I made it happen (for free) on Snow Leopard:
    1) partition, dupe etc all that jazz that you know. Make the mac side work, which it seems we've all been able to do no issues. I used SuperDuper! It worked just fine. (Had it on a disk. I assume you could use any other free way of doing this.)
    2) New hard drive running, I used bootcamp assistant to partition the new drive for a new Bootcamp. I don't know if it's necessary to make the new partition this way for some reason, but it's what the process ultimately included, so maybe try without, but it worked with.
    3) Natively running original drive on the windows side. Used DirveImage XML to clone windows partition onto new drive connected externally.
    4) Back on new hard drive running natively. (Sorry for all the switching.) You'll note that the new Bootcamp partition is NOT bootable at this point. It won't come up in the usual 'alt on startup' boot menu.
    Download rEFInd and install on mac side. Technically this is freeware or w/e, but for the love of god, throw money at this man. He totally deserves it.
    5) Restarting the computer, rEFInd's boot manager finally recognizes windows. But you'll find windows is a little messed up and still won't quite boot. Get out your Windows CD and pop it in. Do the 'alt boot' thing. Your boot menu options are now "EFI Manager," "Bootcamp," and "Windows Disk." Or some such. Holy Crap! It recognizes Windows!
    6) Boot to the CD and tell it to repair the windows volume. It will. My computer also had to do a disk check next time I booted to Windows, which took for-stupid-ever, but eventually worked. (I went to bed in between.)
    7) Everything is running smoothly. Plus, you get the rEFInd boot manager, which is also great.
    Deets: I have a late 2010 MBP 13". Snow leopard/Windows 7 32-bit (long story) Moved from original 320GB seagate momentus to new 750GB Seagate Momentus XT.
    Feel free to share/copy&paste this solution as you see useful. Cheers!

  • Clone a Mac Partition to an External Drive from within Windows 7 Bootcamp?

    Anyone know if it is possible to clone the mac os x partition to an external drive from within Windows 7 bootcamp? I (like a few others) had a problem with the latest 10.6.3 update and I cannot boot into the mac partition but I can access it via bootcamp so I was thinking about trying to clone it to an external drive and then boot from the new clone and see if that works.
    Appreciate your comments.

    setup a 30GB partition on an external drive, along with a partition of 150% the size of your Mac OS X volume -- or larger.
    Install OS X to 30GB.
    While booted from DVD, before you install, you'll need to go to Utility Menu => Disk Utility to do the partitoning. While there, in DU see if you can repair your system.
    And where is your TimeMachine or clone backup? The "Step #1: Backup before beginning your Boot Camp project."?
    No way to backup or clone from within Windows, though you may be able to write to NTFS backup volume, UNLESS you bought MacDrive8 which allows read AND write to HFS+ from within Windows.

  • I can't boot to Windows after resizing my Mac partition.

    So, I recently decided to resize my bootcamp Win7 partition. This is something I have done successfully before, by:
    1) Booting into Macintosh
    2) Using Disk Utility to decrease the size of the Mac partition (20GB the first time)
    3) Booting into Windows
    4) Using Mini-Tool Partition Wizard (third-party) to allocate the free space to the Bootcamp partition.
    There were a couple issues caused by this the first time around, mainly the fact that Macintosh didn’t recognize the fact that the free space had been taken, and had trouble reading from the Windows partition. However, I could live with that. I have since rebooted to both Mac and Windows several times without problem.
    Recently, I decided I needed a bit more space, and so started to follow the above steps, shrinking the Mac partition an additional 15GB. Only when I went to reboot to reallocate the space, the Windows partition didn’t show up as a bootable option. Confused, I booted back to Mac, and the Bootcamp partition was still there, but renamed “disk0s4”, and unmounted. Reparing the disk failed (“Invalid BS_jmpBoot in boot block: 15921e”). The disk wouldn’t mount (not even sure if it was supposed to be mounted earlier, but that’s what it looks like). It also appears grayed-out in the list of drives to the left. It looks like I can create a dmg from the windows drive, although I haven’t done that yet (I will soon).
    Any solutions for this? Although I will erase the drive if absolutely necessary, it would be preferred if that wasn’t the first option to try. I had no problems like this the first time I resized the disk.
    (My mac partition is running Mavericks, if that is of any relevance)

    These steps correct the Partition ID, and the boot ability of the MBR partition that has Windows on it.You can type '?' for help in the following steps where you set the fdisk prompt.
    To fix the MBR, in OSX Terminal
    sudo fdisk -e /dev/disk0
    setpid 4
    07
    flag 4
    p
    w
    y
    q
    Please ignore the i386 message that you see in the following. Here is the set of commands in the utility. The utility starts at partition id 1. If you see any other messages, please post back.
    sudo fdisk -e /dev/disk0
    fdisk: could not open MBR file /usr/standalone/i386/boot0: No such file or directory
    Enter 'help' for information
    fdisk: 1> ?
      help Command help list
      manual Show entire man page for fdisk
      reinit Re-initialize loaded MBR (to defaults)
      auto Auto-partition the disk with a partition style
      setpid Set the identifier of a given table entry
      disk Edit current drive stats
      edit Edit given table entry
      erase Erase current MBR
      flag Flag given table entry as bootable
      update Update machine code in loaded MBR
      select Select extended partition table entry MBR
      print Print loaded MBR partition table
      write Write loaded MBR to disk
      exit Exit edit of current MBR, without saving changes
      quit Quit edit of current MBR, saving current changes
      abort Abort program without saving current changes
    fdisk: 1>

  • Installing windows 7 with bootcamp on mac pro yosemite 10.10: 'your disk could not be partitioned'

    I have been trying to no avail to install windows 7 on my new macbook pro
    with bootcamp in yosemite 10.10
    i continually get the message  'your disk could not be partitioned', does anyone know how to tackle this? *I am including the screenshot
    and when i try to partition my 250GB drive giving 80GB to the windows partition it just errors,
    i have tried rebooting and verifying my disk and repairing and there's no progress or change.. any ideas would be greatly appreciated

    Hi nicoczyz,
    Welcome to the Support Communities!  The steps you have taken to troubleshoot the issue of not being able to create a Windows partition are good ones.  The resource below provides another possible scenario that may be the issue here.  It's not the exact error message as your screen shot and the article references Windows 8, but the troubleshooting steps are still relevant:
    Boot Camp: Partition alert message when using Boot Camp Assistant - Apple Support
    http://support.apple.com/en-us/HT203913
    This symptom may occur if you have partitions on your startup drive in addition to the following:
    one OS X partition
    one Boot Camp partition
    one OS X Recovery partition (normally not visible in Disk Utility)
    If Boot Camp Assistant detects a Microsoft Reserved (MSR) or Windows Recovery partition on your hard drive, you may see this message.  The Boot Camp Assistant cannot continue until the extra partition is removed.
    Microsoft Reserved and Windows Recovery partitions can be identified as unmounted partitions with the name "disk0s3" or "disk0s5" in Disk Utility. To remove these partitions, use OS X Disk Utility.
    Important: Deleting the wrong partition can cause data loss. Be sure to back up both your OS X files and Windows files before attempting this procedure.
    Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
    Click the Partition tab.
    Look for an extra partition named “disk0s3" or “disk0s5”. Select this partition so it is highlighted.
    Click the Remove Partition button ( - ).
    Make sure the partition you selected is noted in the sheet that appears.
    Click Remove.
    When Disk Utility finishes, close the Disk Utility window to quit the app. The Boot Camp Assistant can now be used to reinstall or update your existing Windows partition.
    Set up a Windows partition on your Mac - Apple Support
    http://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204009
    Before you can install Windows your Mac, you need to create and then format a Windows partition.
    Setting up a Windows partition is one of the steps for installing Windows on your Mac. Use Boot Camp Assistant to create the partition, then use the Windows installer to format it.Create the Windows partition
    To create the Windows partition, open Boot Camp Assistant and follow the onscreen instructions. Boot Camp Assistant is in the Utilities folder of your Applications folder. 
    Use only Boot Camp Assistant to create the partition. If you partition with another app and then use Boot Camp Assistant, the drive with the partition could be erased.
    Boot Camp Assistant creates the partition only if the drive is formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled) and doesn't already have a partition created by Boot Camp Assistant. If Boot Camp Assistant sees other partitions, it may warn you that the startup disk cannot be partitioned.
    If you need help determining the best size of the partition, refer to your Windows documentation. For Windows 8, the partition should be at least 30 GB. 
    If Boot Camp Assistant says that verification failed, repair the drive using Disk Utility. If that doesn't help, back up your drive and reinstall OS X.
    The drive you're partitioning must be an internal drive. If you have more than one internal drive and the drive you're partitioning is not in the first drive bay, remove the drives in the lower-numbered bays, then reinstall them after installing Windows. A Fusion Drive is treated as one drive, and the Windows partition is created on the disk drive instead of the flash drive (SSD).
    Format the Windows partition
    Use the Windows installer to format the Windows partition that Boot Camp Assistant created. When you're asked where to install Windows, select the partition named "BOOTCAMP":
    Then click Format to begin formatting the partition using the NTFS file system. If you're installing Windows 7 or Windows 8.0, you won't see the Format option until you click "Drive options (advanced)":
    If the installer says that it couldn't create a new partition or locate an existing one, disconnect any Thunderbolt storage devices connected to your Mac. Reconnect them after installing Windows.
    If you see “No Boot Disk Attached” when starting up your Mac, the Windows partition probably isn't formatted correctly. Remove the partition, then repeat the previous steps for creating and formatting the partition.
    Modify the Windows partition
    Remove the partition, change its size, or change its name.
    Remove the partition
    Use Boot Camp Assistant to safely remove Windows and the Windows partition from your Mac, restoring your startup drive to a single Mac partition. You may want to back up your information first, because removing the partition erases all of the data it contains.
    Open Boot Camp Assistant.
    Select “Remove Windows 7 or later version," then click Continue.
    Do one of the following:
    If your Mac has a single internal disk, click Restore.
    If your Mac has multiple internal disks, select the Windows disk, select “Restore disk to a single OS X partition,” then click Continue.
    Change the size of the partition
    It's not possible to change the size of the partition after installing Windows, but you can remove the partition and create a new partition of the correct size. Don't try to resize your partition with Windows or a third-party app.Change the name of the partition
    You can rename the Windows partition from within Windows. For instructions, refer to your Windows documentation.
    Information about products not manufactured by Apple, or independent websites not controlled or tested by Apple, is provided without recommendation or endorsement. Apple assumes no responsibility with regard to the selection, performance, or use of third-party websites or products. Apple makes no representations regarding third-party website accuracy or reliability. Risks are inherent in the use of the Internet. Contact the vendor for additional information.
    Last Modified: Dec 22, 2014
    I hope this information helps ....
    - Judy

  • I just installed yosemite on my mcb pro mid 2012 and installed win8.1 with bootcamp. now i have the problem, when i'm using windows i don't see my mac partition in the "computer" window. there is only the "bootcamp (c;) partition? what's the problem?

    i just installed yosemite on my mcb pro mid 2012 with a clean install. so i only had the new os x yosemite running on my mac. everything went perfect. than i installed win8.1 with the bootcamp assistant and also everything went perfect.
    But here's the Problem:
    When i'm using Windows 8.1 and i go to the "Computer" window where i can find my hdd partition "Bootcamp (c;) there is only this Partition. the mac Partition is missing.
    so i am not able to read the files on my mac Partition.
    Before i installed yosemite and win8.1, i was running mavericks and win7 on my macbook pro and i haven't had this Problem. i was able to see and read my mac Partition also on Windows 8.1???
    is there any solution for this Problem???
    greez c

    "Before i installed yosemite and win8.1, i was running mavericks and win7 on my macbook pro and i haven't had this Problem. i was able to see and read my mac Partition also on Windows 8.1???"
    Sorry there's a mistake in the sentence!
    i mean:
    "Before i installed yosemite and win8.1, i was running mavericks and win7 on my macbook pro and i haven't had this Problem. i was able to see and read my mac Partition also on Windows 7???"

  • Problems when Booting my Mac/ Partitioning for Windows 7

    Hello Community,
    3 months ago, i bought a MacBook Pro mid 2012-model. I was very satisfied until a really big problem occured.
    The first time I recognized a boot-problem was when I restarted my Mac, a screen with the "forbidden-symbol" came up, after the Apple Logo. So I read some articles on the web and tried to restore my mac. After some trys, this was successfull after about 5h (got slow internet connection). I could also start my mac successfully, and in the boot menu, when hitting alt on the keyboard, a normal Mac partition, and a recovery partition could be seen (Before it only a Mac partition was there, no Windows and no recovery). So I started OS X successfully and looked into hard drive diagnostics and let the computer check the Hard Drive. It said that it was successfully, but after booting the second time (after successfull restore), I had the same problem again (and there was only one partition showing in the boot menu).
    Finally, after 4 days of problem-solving, I managed to install windows 7 on my mac, without installing mac. Now I want to make a Mac recovery disk on windows, and use it for restoring.
    So my question is:
    1. What is causing the boot-problem and how can I solve that? I am sooooo desperated and just want to go back to Windows computers .
    2. If there is no chance I can repair my mac, how can I create a recovery diskon Windows? (This question is less important, but i'd be REALLY thankful for any hints)
    Thank you in advance!
    With best regards,
    David Al

    Got it. Thanks for the help.  Isn't there any boot disk thing that I can just stick in there that will jerk the OS sideways and give me the Mac login screen, or did the Bootcamp/partition attack just wreck everything?  I don't see why I have to do an entire scrape of my totally updated and formerly working OSX just to retry a routine Bootcamp partition, which the girl at the Mac Store in Seattle here assured me has worked for them all the time.   It really is a crock. Maybe I shouldn't bother trying to put Windows 7 on there at all if all these latest versions are so flimsy. I wouldn't want to have to do it all again. But it looks like I'll have to at least once. And send Apple the bill for my wasted time. I ain't feelin' the glamour.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Crop and Zoom

    I want to crop and/or zoom into a corner of a clip in my project, and then slowly zoom back out to show the entire clip. But I can't figure out how to accomplish this. When I use the crop or clip effect, it remains for the length of the clip. To give

  • MacMini very slow in login/logout

    Hi All, since a few days, my minimac (OSX 10.6.8) started to have a very strange behaviour. The startup process since when I switch it on to when I am able to perform any action on the UI became of several minutes. I have auto login enabled, therfore

  • Best practice for OSB, OER and OSR

    Hi, I would like to know what are the best practices for using OSB, OER and OSR together in a run-time environment for a simple WSDL service. From how I see it: 1) Create service-definition in OER 2) Create proxy and business service in OSB 3) Use ha

  • Spilt function in oracle pl/sql 8i

    Hi, iam actually looking for a split function , where in i get a string as india australia pakistan, now i want to store them in three variables, in pl/sql can any one help me out??? cheere...

  • Trouble creating styles for my BC Blog

    Hey so I am no genius in this world of web designing, but I have managed to get myself this far with this website I am building... I am using Adobe Muse for the general design and publishing to BC. I want to have a blog in my site so I found this vid