![]() ![]() Had I not been doing so, I suspect that the errors would have accumulated to the point of data loss. I’m in the habit of running Disk Utility every few weeks. (I’m not pleased by the frequency of errors on my SSD, but so far I’ve caught small errors early enough not to have had problems.) Over the past year Verify Disk has reported errors requiring repair four times. I’ve got a MacBook Pro Retina with 500 GB SSD. Jason, have you run Disk Utility > Verify Disk? The only problem is that the DT dictionary doesn’t seem to have a method of detecting that! B O N E headed! ![]() Unfortunately, it appears that V&R is also borked.Īt the very least we need a tool which simply searches for missing files. If I was designing a sync system, I’d damn well make sure it ran a verify and repair before starting and maybe it does. There are tons of articles about going paperless all over the internet with people extolling the virtues of DT and how once it’s in there you can now shred the original. I bet not a lot of people are as obsessive about backups as I am. I use Arq, Time Machine and Carbon Copy Cloner so as not to rely on one technology. This makes me start to question the reliability of DT.įortunately for me I have two cloud backups, a backup to a Synology, three hard disk based backups and one to a thumb drive. ![]() Verify and repair reports nothing unusual but the sync starts chugging along and then stops because a file is missing. I have been trying to sync for two days now. ![]()
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