Invisible folders
Is there anyway to make the user folders on a Mac to be invisible? I mean to be invisible just for the users not for the system, somekind like the hidden folders. I want to be able to open them with Finder's "Go to folder". I ask this not for some kind of securing those folders, but because I connect remotely to that Mac and I want to use just 1 folder from the user and the rest (Desktop, Documents, Library, Movies, Music, Pictures, Public, Sites) just bother my eyes.
If this is not possible can I at least make them very very transparent in some manner?
10x
If this is not possible can I at least make them very very transparent in some manner?
10x
Comments
Second, I believe you can hide folders by putting a dot in front of the name, ie, Stuff turned to .Stuff should be invisible.
Somebody correct me on either or both of my points if I'm wrong. THREADSTARTER: wait till somebody else puts their two cents in, I'm not 100% sure.
http://www.altomac.com/hide_folders/
Is there anyway to make the user folders on a Mac to be invisible? I mean to be invisible just for the users not for the system, somekind like the hidden folders. I want to be able to open them with Finder's "Go to folder". I ask this not for some kind of securing those folders, but because I connect remotely to that Mac and I want to use just 1 folder from the user and the rest (Desktop, Documents, Library, Movies, Music, Pictures, Public, Sites) just bother my eyes.
If this is not possible can I at least make them very very transparent in some manner?
10x
Okay so first it's hidden password protected disk partitions and now it's invisible folders.... While I'd rather not speculate as to exactly what you're trying to hide (and please I'd REALLY rather not know) I will say this.
OS X is a MULTI-USER OS where each user has his/her own HOME DIRECTORY that is NOT (or should not unless you've really screwed things up) accessible to the other users of the system. If you have other people using the system you SHOULD NOT fear them seeing your 'special files' (wink wink nudge nudge say no more say no more) since the only way that could ever happen is if you left your account logged-in (not a good thing when trying to hide things) or if you shared your password with someone you were trying to hide things from (again not the smartest thing you could do).
Good luck, and I for one am pulling for you to not get caught even though my wife hopes you do.
Dave
Okay so first it's hidden password protected disk partitions and now it's invisible folders.... While I'd rather not speculate as to exactly what you're trying to hide (and please I'd REALLY rather not know) I will say this.
OS X is a MULTI-USER OS where each user has his/her own HOME DIRECTORY that is NOT (or should not unless you've really screwed things up) accessible to the other users of the system. If you have other people using the system you SHOULD NOT fear them seeing your 'special files' (wink wink nudge nudge say no more say no more) since the only way that could ever happen is if you left your account logged-in (not a good thing when trying to hide things) or if you shared your password with someone you were trying to hide things from (again not the smartest thing you could do).
Good luck, and I for one am pulling for you to not get caught even though my wife hopes you do.
Dave
Ok, the reason for what I am asking is to use the Mac Mini @ my office as LAN disk drive. The hidden stuff would be some files that not all the employees should see obviusly.
The thing is that I can't hide those folders ( I don't need them to be hidden for security, like I said I nedd them to be hidden because they bother my eyes).
It seems theat with no software am not able to hide the system folders (Desktop and Library), because this actually this programs change the name of the directory.
Is there any application that makes folders transparent?
But as you're looking for a solution for connecting more than 10 users to the same Mac mini at once in your office (see your other thread " Mac mini as LAN disk drive"), you are forced to buy OS X Server 10.4 (unlimited clients version), because both the "regular" Mac OS X that came with the Mac mini as well as OS X Server 10.4 (10-Client license) are restricted to 10 concurrent users accessing the server (or quasi-server).
But beware: OS X Server 10.4 is, if I recall things correctly, right now available only for the PPC platform. So if you have an Intel Mac mini, you're restricted to 10 concurrent connections only.