To mount a drive, navigate to the Go menu, then choose “Connect to Server”.įrom there, you’ll get a window like the one below. The first thing we need to do is begin the process of mounting your drives a single time. The best part about this process is that you don’t need to be anywhere but on your Desktop, in the Finder. For the most part, though, this process works flawlessly. Why do I say it only mostly works? Well, if you have a drive mounted and then put your computer to sleep, or if you lose the connection to the network drive for whatever reason, your Mac may not remount the drive when you come out of sleep (or restore your connection), or it may simply take a minute or so for the computer to remount the drive (rather than it being instantaneous). I’m going to focus on the easy way for us right now. There’s an easy way (that mostly works) and a harder way (that always works). I’ve had a few people moving from Windows ask me how they can do the equivalent of “Map network drive” in Mac OS X Leopard.
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