I have a Mac and am dual booting Ubuntu. Fallout 4 for mac. I booted from a USB and used GParted to shrink the Ubuntu partition leaving me with about 100G of free space. Lexmark universal printer driver for mac. I want to use this to increase the OS X partition space. GParted will not let me increase the OS X partition size (although it will let me decrease it). Usb file format for mac and windows. https://cricketyellow864.weebly.com/turbotax-for-mac.html. I've also tried using Disk Utility from OS X.
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My Macintosh HD startup disk disappeared today, but I was able to use GParted to delete a small partition from the drive and the missing disk reappeared.
Boot Camp Assistant got me into this hot water when I was preparing to reinstall XP. I had partitioned my harddrive into one 276 GB Mac partition and one 5 GB Windows partition, but decided to delete the Windows partition and start over. This time I used BCA and set the size of the new partition to 16 GB. When running the XP installer, I noticed I was only shown a single 'C:' partition as an option for the install location. The first time I installed XP, I remember seeing two partitions listed with 'Unpartitioned space' between them in the list. Something didn't seem right, so I exited the installer and rebooted, holding the option key for the boot menu. I was shocked to discover that my 'Macintosh HD' startup disk was gone.. only a 'Windows' disk was available (not the install CD). I booted from the Snow Leopard install DVD and ran Disk Utility. It showed no partitions at all on the drive, and the verify and repair options were grayed out. Yes, I had a Time Machine backup to restore from, but before doing that I decided to try booting from a GParted LiveCD. Unlike in Disk Utility, the drive did appear to be partitioned, and I saw my large HFS+ partition (unlabeled, though) and another small partition. Although I was unable to 'check/repair' either of them with GParted, I was able to delete the 16 GB partition. After that, the 'Macintosh HD' label reappeared, the check command ran without a hitch, and I was able to boot back into Snow Leopard, without any data loss to speak of. This Apple Support discussion describes a similar experience. I wonder if others have run into trouble using BCA? [crarko adds: I haven't tested this one. Keep those backups up-to-date, folks.] Gparted Live For Mac
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