![]() The good news there is that there's a fork of MacFUSE called FUSE for OS X that supersedes it and has been updated to work all the way up to El Capitan, which is the latest version of OS X. ![]() Because of that, it's not getting loaded, and your stuff's not working. The problem here is that it relies on a thing called MacFUSE to work its magic, and MacFUSE was never updated to work past Snow Leopard. It looks like, from the error message, that your system had/has NTFS-3G installed on it, which is why you were able to do this under Snow Leopard. It's pretty deep system-level stuff that it installs. It's not re-partitioning anything on your computer or anything like that, it's just simply adding in the ability to read those kinds of disks. What the Paragon utility does (and the aforementioned Tuxera NTFS one as well) is installs a set of drivers that allow OS X to read and write to NTFS-formatted drives/partitions. Thank you, computer gurus of MeFi! posted by ananci to Computers & Internet (4 answers total)īest answer: No, it's not a partitioning thing (well, as far as your hard drives and such are concerned). Here's the current error message I get when I plug in either of the external drives:Īt /Volumes/Backup because the following problem occurred:ĭyld: Library not loaded: /usr/local/lib/libfuse.2.dylib Is Paragon is the correct tool for this? If not, suggestions are welcome. ![]() Ultimately, I need to be able to access these files in Photoshop. ![]() Should I upgrade to 8GB of RAM before even attempting to install Paragon, or does a partition not affect performance in this way? If that's the case, what are the implications for running Photoshop CS6 on 2GB of RAM, which is already frustratingly slow on Yosemite, though it was fine on Snow Leopard. If I understand correctly, Paragon creates a partition in the internal hard drive to enable NTFS files to be read and accessed. I only recently upgraded to Yosemite (hard drive issue predates this) and I understand that I can purchase Paragon to enable NTFS file handling. ![]()
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