Hello, Snakey, its mostly because its for personal reasons. It's not that I didn't understand the class when I actually took it, I was told I did very well, however, those personal reasons are more safety related. I've heard that once you have a seizure, you're not able to drive. However, I haven't had one since the mid-1980's (or so), I'm not going to bore you with the actual reason also, this forum isn't the place for it. Let's just say, its neurological, if you have a friend or relative who has a pretty major neurological condition, perhaps they can explain more.Clix Pix:Time machine does a "delta" (FYI delta is the greek letter used to represent change in science and engineering) backup incrementally.
First time around, it does a full backup of everything.
Every time after that, it only backs up what has changed from that original backup. If you've added a file, it'll add the file to the backup instead of re-doing it all from scratch.
a-m-k: what prevents you from leaving the house? Are you prevented from reaching the front door for a package? I'm still not sure what prevents you from fixing your computer after all these months. Your hard drive is likely about to crap out, you're on borrowed time, all that software fixing is just pushing back the moment when you'll press the power button and you'll get nothing but a folder with a question mark on the screen.
If you are disabled, can someone come around and help you out? Anyone able to operate a screwdriver can change a hard drive in your machine, it really isn't hard.
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A-M-K, what is this "Mac Mechanic" software which you've mentioned several times? I ask because that name is not familiar to me and I've been using Macs for a long time (since 2005). There are programs which are repeatedly mentioned over and over as being reliable, trustworthy and non-damaging to one's machine, such as OnyX, Disk Warrior, etc. Where does this "Mac Mechanic" software come from? Are there reviews of it in reliable sources? You may or may not be aware that there are at least a couple of software programs which advertise heavily and which proclaim that they are superior for cleaning up problems in one's Mac but in reality can cause more problems than they resolve. Are you sure that "Mac Mechanic" is actually a safe, reliable software program to use?
The bigger image is the program itself, and the smaller picture is the icon its associated with. Yes, I was advised by a technician when all my problems started. (Do you remember me mentioning a very long talk with an technician one afternoon? That is how I ended up with this app. It does every cleaning aspect of all the different things that should be cleaned out.) I wouldn't go and search online for something like this. It's very helpful, however when I run it, It takes the bar graph forever to load... which is completely normal because it has to reindex. (I learned this from a friend who also has a Mac and has been helping me figure out why my HDD wasn't showing the bar graph correctly.)
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