![]() ![]() => The following directories will be made group writable: usr/local/share/zsh/site-functions/_brew ![]() Last login: Wed Jun 1 13:28:47 on consoleĪuns-MacBook:~ aun$ /usr/bin/ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL )" I followed the instructions byt get the following error That I think is the problem and cannot think of a solution. From then, you cannot rename the files because the "?" is illegal. The problem is not the file naming I believe, it is just that mp3tag will append any Mac OS X hard disk with "\\?\unix" before the disk or directory name. I have another Firewire drive called My Book attached to the same Mac, where I copied the files to. Is that not possible.Īll drives internal and external, USB or Firewire will appear under the "Volumes" directory. Then I'd simply paste those files I copied into this new parent folder. On that USB drive I'd have a folder setup with the name: Then I'd have a USB drive connected to my computer. I would navigate to the "old files recovered" folder, select all the files and subdirectories within that folder, then COPY. Maybe I'm misunderstanding (and I'm thinking only about windows as I don't use a Mac), but if I had files on my harddrive that were located here: I'm talking about copy and paste files not renamiing current folder. ![]() So I guess mp3tag will not work even on an internal volume. I just tried using the iTunes subdirectory on the internal volume and even so, it is showing up as: Once again, this is just my guess with my limited knowledge. So it is having a problem with the internal volume itself I think because the "?" is added even before the "Volumes" subdirectory. This particular drive shows up in a further subdirectory "Old Files Recovered" The external drives all show up under the subdirectory "Volumes". Under the path in the mp3tag interface, when I browse, the internal volume shows up as "/" I don t think you can assign a drive letter on Mac drives. In windows, one goes to START > THIS PC > Computer > Map Network Drive, and assigns a letter. I don't know how to assign a letter to a network drive in a Mac. ![]()
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