Oct 29

I will readily admit that I am paranoid about my digital life. My Mac has enough personal information on it that a genetic clone with my login password could completely replace me in my everyday life. I’ve talked about this concern previously.maney-maxwell-smart.jpg

I’ve gotten pretty smart about encrypting the really serious stuff. My method of choice happens to be Knox. But I started thinking about the unlikely event that someone might get my password and open the encrypted file. So I took it to another level. I made my user account folder invisible. I thought I was pretty clever. Until I needed to migrate my data to my new Leopard install.

I started my upgraded to Leopard by doing migration install on a blank drive, but I changed my mind after the install was complete. I just went ahead and did a clean install on the same drive, which of course reformats the drive. So by this time I I had forgotten my super-genius plan to hide my user folder. After the install was complete I went to the drive containing the old system and guess what was missing from the user folder. That’s right… my user folder, which of course was invisible.

I thought that Leopard had some how magically deleted a user folder on a totally separate drive. finally, I decided that no way would Cupertino do that to me. I fired up my old system drive and voila, everything was intact. I eventually figured it all out and fixed the problem.

The moral to the story is that Apple loves me and would never hurt me.

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