Many users believe that Macintosh operating system based computers are quite robust and can never undergo any software or hardware problem. Indeed Mac systems are quite advanced in terms of features and functionality. However, sometimes, you may witness such complex errors, which are almost impossible to resolve, resulting in the loss or inaccessibility of your valuable data. Such complex cases of data loss can only be dealt with Mac drive recovery software, which can help you recover the data from the troubled Mac hard drive.
Among many such annoying errors, one may witness the below error message:
"Your Startup Disk is full. You need to delete some files"
Such an error message suggests you to free some disk space. If you delete some unwanted files and tried your hand out at emptying the Trash Bin, the system halts infinitely. The Mac OS X tries to work on deleting the selected files for some time but ends up keeping those files as they were.
In the above case, you don't have any choice except a hard reset by pressing the power button directly. However, after hard reset, the condition remains the same and the Mac system doesn't boot further, hanging with the pinwheel spinning infinitely in the Grey start-up screen. Moreover, the situation becomes so worse that the system even doesn't boot-up in safe mode. To add further, no hardware component works and you cannot even eject the CD drive. Hence, it ceases the option to boot the system from the system boot disc.
Though, there can be a number of reasons behind, the most possible reason can be the corruption of the hard drive data structure. It may be the corruption of file system or the partition table. The corruption of the hard drive data structure is an serious issue, as the operating system manages and accesses the hard drive data through this only and hence, the data in the drive becomes completely inaccessible.
But, the most important thing is to recover the data from the inaccessible drive and for that you need to attach the troubled hard drive to another working Mac based system as the secondary device. Then, you have to try accessing the drive and run Disk Utility. If it fails to repair the issue, just make another try by running the 'fsck' command.
If both the options fail to resolve the error, you are left with a single choice of running any Mac data recovery software to recover back the data from the hard drive.
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