You can restore the old Disk Utility using the steps here; https://justus.berlin/2015/10/restore-old-disk-utility-in-os-x-el-capitan/
You can restore the old Disk Utility using the steps here; https://justus.berlin/2015/10/restore-old-disk-utility-in-os-x-el-capitan/
Thanks for connecting me with this issue. It's truly sad to see this. I'm not some user who wants access to all the nuts and bolts but seriously, being unable to setup a new drive that happened to come with NTFS partitions should not be so difficult. If the idea was to make this easier for consumers they failed.[ This post was merged into this thread from a completely separate thread, so may seem out of place and repetitive. ]
This topic has been beaten up like a government mule...
The summary of the story, in my opinion, is this:
Of course, Disk Utility is starting to look a lot like the iWork suite makeover a year or two ago. Apple stripped out a whole bunch of features during the re-write process... then slowly started adding them back in as the features were updated. It's not always clear why Apple does something right when they do it, but many times (sometimes years later) it comes to light why and makes total sense.
- Yes, Apple has dumbed it down. Apple is a consumer company, not a "pro" company, so you're going to find little in the way of sympathy for geeks as the software goes.
- Yes, the Disk Utility has lost some capabilities. Some of those capabilities aren't necessary anymore, but some are just a mystery as to why they're gone.
- Yes, Disk Utility is having all sorts of issues with 3rd party drives, setting up RAIDS and partitioning. See #1 above. 90% of Apple's customers don't need to do any of those things. Of the 10% that do, 90% of them are smart enough to figure out how to do it another way... and the remaining 10% of the 90% just like to complain.
Like the Power Mac 5500 of 1997?It's not always clear why Apple does something right when they do it, but many times (sometimes years later) it comes to light why and makes total sense.
[ This post was merged into this thread from a completely separate thread, so may seem out of place and repetitive. ]
This topic has been beaten up like a government mule...
The summary of the story, in my opinion, is this:
Of course, Disk Utility is starting to look a lot like the iWork suite makeover a year or two ago. Apple stripped out a whole bunch of features during the re-write process... then slowly started adding them back in as the features were updated. It's not always clear why Apple does something right when they do it, but many times (sometimes years later) it comes to light why and makes total sense.
- Yes, Apple has dumbed it down. Apple is a consumer company, not a "pro" company, so you're going to find little in the way of sympathy for geeks as the software goes.
- Yes, the Disk Utility has lost some capabilities. Some of those capabilities aren't necessary anymore, but some are just a mystery as to why they're gone.
- Yes, Disk Utility is having all sorts of issues with 3rd party drives, setting up RAIDS and partitioning. See #1 above. 90% of Apple's customers don't need to do any of those things. Of the 10% that do, 90% of them are smart enough to figure out how to do it another way... and the remaining 10% of the 90% just like to complain.
I still fail to see how Apple has been ‘dumbing’ Disk Utility down. They changed the user interface to what can be found elsewhere, e.g. Finder. The criticism is mostly about the overall sloppy and unfinished state of the program, i.e. replacing a (mostly) decent program with a newer, buggy one, and an unnecessary removal of RAID support. There is nothing else about it. If Apple had just bundled the old Disk Utility for the transition as well, just as they did when they revamped AirPort Utility a few years back, this would be much less of a problem.
Very interesting but should we really need to go through that to have a usable disk utility.
I haven't had to go into Disk Utility for sometime and I must say I don't like the El Cap version. Seems very dumbed down and doesn't handle some external drives well. Ran into all sorts of problems trying to format a 128GB USB Stick. I eventually gave up and used it with my Windows system.
Then I purchased a Seagate 4TB external drive to handle Time Machine backups. Once again nothing but trouble, errors deleting and creating partitions. Completely useless.
I eventually downloaded Paragon Hard Disk Manager for Mac even though it's still looks to be pre-release software. It worked perfectly and worked as reliably as the old Disk Utility.
Sometimes I think Apple has gone too far with the dumbing down of systems and software.
Of course perhaps the elegant simplicity of the new tool was beyond my ability to perceive.
Anything is possible. -- I did just finish working a double.
60-day free trial on a pre-release product sounds very much like they are looking to customers to be their Quality Assurance department.
Here's the rub, if something goes wrong, they'll hide behind the "pre-release" moniker and maybe seek details about the resulting issue. They'll say something about getting it for "free" and not being responsible for any damage or loss of data.
I think I'll hold back on Paragon's product and 10.11 for now. Yes, our laptops are running it as well as a Mac Mini but the desktops don't have to have it so waiting is going to be my best option.
My wife has no problems with the removal of power user functionality. I'm not so forgiving as there are times it is needed to get at the lower levels of things to resolve issues or to setup new hardware.
I have 2 external USB drives that need to be repartitioned so I'll try one of the laptops with 10.11 and see how well they do with them. That will let me know if the desktops get updated or remain frozen.
This might have been fixed in .4 betas, but 10.11.3 Disk Utility wasn't able to format a USB stick with two dots in its name. (Bodhi Linux 2.3.0 or something similar.) The Yosemite DU had no problems, of course.As to ur wife. I don't really think this is power user functionality. If that's all they did, the minute you plugged in a non-Apple formatted drive the system would just pop up a screen and offer to make it Apple compatible.
Excellent test. As to ur wife. I don't really think this is power user functionality. If that's all they did, the minute you plugged in a non-Apple formatted drive the system would just pop up a screen and offer to make it Apple compatible.
The ordinary user would be fine and it would be done.
The way it is now someone like your wife would be try calling tech support for the new drive she bought because it doesn't work on her Mac. I can just imagine the call. " I can't copy anything to it and Time Machine backups are failing"
Disk utility isn't just nerfed, as far as I'm concerned it's broken.
It would be good to know how your experiment goes.
Well that was a glorious failure of Disk Utility under 10.11.
One of the two drives had already been partitioned. The remaining drive was my old TimeMachine drive. The DiskUtility in 10.11 kept reporting errors in trying to format the drive as ExFAT. Unlike previous DiskUtility applications the version in 10.11 does not allow a user to remove the existing partition.
Brought the drive to my desktop running 10.10.5 and the DiskUtility on this system reported the drive unreadable. Asked if I wanted to initialize the drive. Then I attempted to remove the only partition and it is sitting at "Preparing to remove partition." I'll give it a bit before doing a force kill on DiskUtility and trying again.
The short version is the DiskUtility in 10.11 made the drive unreadable. That is not a good thing and something Apple should fix.
I'm having the same problem (NTFS partition with Win 10 on it not showing up in Disk Utility - I've got Paragon NTFS, their latest El Capitan compatible version, installed and running) - funnily enough, the partition WILL show up in Recovery Mode. But that uses the same version of Disk Utility (15.0 / 1150) as far as I can see - doesn't seem to make sense now, does it?
I know that speaking of torrents and mentioning hacked parts of the OSX system makes some people react as a bull when showing it the famous red rug (although apparently bulls are actually colour blind).Sadly there is no way to replace DU in the OSX installer.
I just spent 20 minutes trying to remove all the partitions on a drive. You just can't just remove all partitions anymore which is pretty dumb, and the whole partitioning UI is ridiculous.
Again Apple trying to "solve" a problem that wasn't there to begin with.
Same, I refuse to use the one that came with El Capitan.I know that speaking of torrents and mentioning hacked parts of the OSX system makes some people react as a bull when showing it the famous red rug (although apparently bulls are actually colour blind).
However many months ago I found easely in the net a Yosemite DU modified in a way that allowed me to install it in El Capitan side by side with it's own DU.
I ignored some outraged MacRumor members who said it was dangerous and irresponsible and I would have terrible problems...blah, blah.
Since then when I need the DU...I use that one and neither had my computer exploded util now nor the OSX become ruined because of that.
I don't advise others to do it if someone is afraid of touching his or her system. I cannot take any responsibility for other people.
I only say that for me it works much better than the DU which came with El Capitan.
Ed
Same, I refuse to use the one that came with El Capitan.