dce@sony.com (David Elliott) (11/13/89)
Well, it looks like Barry Eynon was correct. Turning off DfaultD gets rid of the problem where you are asked to insert your hard disk. Of course, if it were that simple, it wouldn't be a computer problem, now would it. It seems that the bug only manifests when DfaultD hasn't been utilized. I leave my Mac on most of the time, and the one application I use the most was registered with DfaultD, which is why the problem wasn't consistent with me. Kind of sad, really, since DfaultD is pretty useful. -- David Elliott dce@sony.com | ...!{uunet,mips}!sonyusa!dce (408)944-4073 "You can lead a robot to water, but you can not make him compute."