Thursday, September 20th, 2007 at 8:05 PM
After getting back to Boot Camp from a dual-boot Mac OS X system, I remembered how disappointing it was that I couldn’t rename the Windows NTFS volume from “Untitled” to something more appropriate. The Garbage In Garbage Out blog has a tip that will accomplish the next best thing: Hide the Boot Camp volume from your Desktop.
Using the SetFile utility from the Developer Tools package that came with your Mac (on the second disc), you can effectively remove the volume from view in the Finder, while not affecting its normal operation or visibility anywhere else in the system. Great tip!
This entry was posted on Thursday, September 20th, 2007 at 8:05 pm and is filed under Misc. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
ADB Mouse Conversion
iPod Super
Incidentally, you can rename the Windows partition; just boot into Windows, name the drive there, and when you reboot into Mac OS X, the new name will appear. This definitely works in Vista as that’s how my MacBook is set up; haven’t tried it with XP though I can’t think why it wouldn’t work.
I thought that you could just drag the BootCamp Drive off the Finder window and it will not show up again. Now, I had BootCamp installed on my machine, so I may not be remembering correctly.
[...] | Command-Tab Más información | Garbage [...]
Hi,
why the all the fuzz because of a desktop Icon?
Install http://www.ntfs-3g.org, make Leopard read AND write NTFS-Partitions in order to change Volume names at your likings … and dont even pay sth for it …
scnr … :=)
dennis
Dennis, i have ntfs-3G and that doesn’t work.
Regarding Christopher’s comment: I just tried renaming my C: partition in Windows XP, and indeed the name change does affect Mac OS X’s display (under Leopard 10.5.3). Great tip!
Haven’t tried it yet on my mac, but supposedly renaming the partition to a name beginning with a ‘.’ prevents mac from mounting it at all, yet maintains the boot option.