Team Kindly assist , my MacBook Pro is unable to read or accept my Samsung T5 SSD. This is the error I get immediately when connecting the SSD.
Have you checked/changed connection cables ? If the drive is in a case remove and replace back in? Try connecting to a different port on the Mac? Also, is it a new drive that you haven't formatted to APFS yet? Can you open Disk Utility with the drive connected?Team Kindly assist , my MacBook Pro is unable to read or accept my Samsung T5 SSD. This is the error I get immediately when connecting the SSD.View attachment 2146511
Have you installed the Samsung software for this particular SSD? As you may know, you won't be able to access the encrypted partition on the drive without installing the software. The T5 has a non-encrypted setup partition that you should be able to access regardless, but the encrypted partition is encrypted on-device (SSD firmware) and requires the software to be installed on your Mac.Team Kindly assist , my MacBook Pro is unable to read or accept my Samsung T5 SSD. This is the error I get immediately when connecting the SSD.
That’s excellent news! Lucky for you that you had a Windows laptop available as well.Guys I connected the T5 to my windows Laptop and did a software update , then used the USB c cable to connect it to MacBook M1 pro suddenly it appears on my desktop.🤦♂️🤦♂️🤦♂️. Thank you team.
That’s excellent news! Lucky for you that you had a Windows laptop available as well.
That said, you might still have been able to do this just with the Mac by unplugging the drive, updating the Samsung software on the Mac and then plugging the disk back into the Mac. As I recall, the Samsung software runs as a background app on the Mac, and activates when the drive is plugged in, so updating that software would have been the easiest step.
Anyway, great to hear you got it worked out.
Indeed, there was that Recovery Mode "hack" that you mentioned. Actually, I tried that on my MacBook Air M1, and it still didn't work—the T5 was never recognized. I really "pulled my hair out" on that one for a long time before giving up. Perhaps as you mentioned, the extension did not load anyway on the Apple silicon-based version of macOS despite the "reduced security" setting, or due to either being blocked by the AS firmware, the security chip or for some other inexplicable reason.My experience of the Samsung T5 and T7 software is anything but straightforward.
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The two problems are that first you need to boot to Recovery to change Startup Security to "Reduced Security" to be able to run third party extensions. Second, having installed the extension is getting it to load, hence detect the Samsung drives. Having got it working successfully it always seems to be knocked of its perch by updates etc, and needs redoing.
Indeed, there was that Recovery Mode "hack" that you mentioned.