Desktop_.ini
First time poster here, hoping a few geniuses out there can lend a quick hand.
I have a fairly large directory on my Time Capsule that I keep trying to remove using my MBP, but every time I toss it in the trash I get an error that I cannot delete the file "desktop_.ini" (not dekstop.ini, but desktop_.ini) because it is in use.
So I do a quick search of the folder and lo and behold there are dozens of these files. So I decide to try removing one by opening the Info box and unckecking 'locked.'
About 1 second later the locked rechecks itself. I quickly verify that I've logged into the Time Capsule with both read & write access, and try again. Same result.
A little digging around on the internet and I'm seeing that this is very likely some sort of virus.
So here are my questions:
1) Any good anti-virus recommendations for OS X 10.5?
2) Is there an easier way around this that doesn't involve erasing my entire Time Capsule?
Any feedback here would be greatly appreciated.
I have a fairly large directory on my Time Capsule that I keep trying to remove using my MBP, but every time I toss it in the trash I get an error that I cannot delete the file "desktop_.ini" (not dekstop.ini, but desktop_.ini) because it is in use.
So I do a quick search of the folder and lo and behold there are dozens of these files. So I decide to try removing one by opening the Info box and unckecking 'locked.'
About 1 second later the locked rechecks itself. I quickly verify that I've logged into the Time Capsule with both read & write access, and try again. Same result.
A little digging around on the internet and I'm seeing that this is very likely some sort of virus.
So here are my questions:
1) Any good anti-virus recommendations for OS X 10.5?
2) Is there an easier way around this that doesn't involve erasing my entire Time Capsule?
Any feedback here would be greatly appreciated.
Comments
It seems to be a set of Windows files, OS X doesn't make desktop_.ini files AFAIK. What you can try is moving to trash and then choosing secure empty trash from the Finder file menu.
If that doesn't work, try using the terminal (/Applications/Utilities/terminal) and type rm -rf and drag the folder into the terminal window. Be careful using this command. If it won't allow it, you can use sudo rm -rf and drag it in and then type your password.
I think AI ought to pay you to stay in this forum.
Marvin,
I think AI ought to pay you to stay in this forum.
There are lots of other people here who know these answers too and I'm sure they would help just the same.