Messages is an Apple app that’s installed as a part of macOS, so you can’t simply delete it. If you’re in an office with your iPhone, iPad, and Mac, and all of them alert you to an incoming message, with a slight delay between them, the sound of all those alerts can be, well, let’s say, a distraction. Sometimes, however, it can be a little bit too much. One of its most useful features is the ability to send and receive messages from any device connected to your iCloud account, including your Mac. Download a free version here.Īpple’s iMessage service is a brilliant and excellent way of keeping in touch with other Apple device users without incurring additional charges from your network provider. It digs up all background apps and browser items so you can free your Mac from junk. Mac 911 cannot reply to email with troubleshooting advice nor can we publish answers to every question.But if you want to remove all distractions from apps and online pop-ups, try our new app, CleanMyMac X. We’re always looking for problems to solve! Email yours including screen captures as appropriate. In my experience, when I’ve had a problem with a new-ish laptop, within the first few months, the odds of getting back the unit with the hard drive intact are very low, so you’re probably not making that much more work for yourself in the end: you’ll want to make a backup (or two) anyway, and you’ll need to restore if they replace the drive or the entire laptop. Let them do their work and then you can restore your data to a FileVault encrypted drive when you get it back.”
When sending a Mac to a service center, if you can’t remove the drive and ask them to use a temporary one they have for troubleshooting hardware, you should make multiple backups (to be safe), then reformat the drive without using FileVault. He also agreed with Don’s concern and my assessment, that only wiping the drive and reinstalling OS X will provide the privacy Don wants: Thus your best option is to always enable FileVault since you then don’t need to worry since encrypted data won’t be recoverable without the key, so data still isn’t recoverable once deleted.
It takes slightly more effort than just logging in, but they’re all available.ĭue to how SSD drives work, you can’t reliably erase all the data on them. As Don recognizes, if you create a separate account, but give that account administrative privileges that will be needed for testing and diagnosis, that administrative account can effectively see any files on the decrypted drive while the computer is running.
#Hands off my macaroni pro#
Is there a way to provide the service center with access to the MacBook Pro but not my confidential data stored on the laptop?
#Hands off my macaroni software#
It appears the only feasible way (other than securely wiping entire drive) to prevent admin access/copying my data is to delete certain software (Dropbox, LastPass, etc) and then secure erase the associated data folders.
#Hands off my macaroni full#
My concern is providing the laptop to the service center with admin password or temp admin privileges as this appears to give them full access to my FileVault encrypted drive. The removal of Secure Empty Trash for SSDs in El Capitan, about a repair operation he needs for his brand spanking new Mac: