Why After resetting the PRAM on my Mac Pro with OS High Sierra I have two desktop folders

After resetting the PRAM on my Mac Pro (Mid 2012) with OS High Sierra (10.13.6) I have two desktop folders. The one that is my actual showing desktop and that shows up in the Finder window sidebar does not have all the items on it that were there before the reset.

The path shown for it is (myusername) with a little house symbol in front of it > Desktop.

The original desktop that DOES have all the items in it before the reset but is NOT showing as my desktop is MacSSD1 > Users > (username) > Desktop. (MacSSD1 is the startup disc.)

Why do I have two desktop folders?



[Re-Titled by Moderator]

Mac Pro, macOS 10.13

Posted on Mar 11, 2024 9:57 PM

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Posted on Mar 12, 2024 5:39 PM

Ha! It wasn't until I attempted to run Disk Utility that I realized that after the PRAM reset apparently the startup disc changed to the other bootable hard drive I have. So I thought I was booted from MacSSD1 because that's what I always boot from, but I wasn't.


So, mystery solved. Operator error. (I have a clone of MacSSD1 on another HD partition, so it's bootable.) Thanks for your time. Interesting that the startup disc was changed without me touching anything though.

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Mar 12, 2024 5:39 PM in response to BDAqua

Ha! It wasn't until I attempted to run Disk Utility that I realized that after the PRAM reset apparently the startup disc changed to the other bootable hard drive I have. So I thought I was booted from MacSSD1 because that's what I always boot from, but I wasn't.


So, mystery solved. Operator error. (I have a clone of MacSSD1 on another HD partition, so it's bootable.) Thanks for your time. Interesting that the startup disc was changed without me touching anything though.

Mar 12, 2024 1:58 PM in response to NoseGuard-00

In Finder's Menu, select Go menu>Go to Folder, and go to "/volumes". (no quotes)


Volumes is where an alias to your hard drive ("/" at boot) is placed at startup, and where all the "mount points" for auxiliary drives are created for you to access them. This folder is normally hidden from view.


Drives with an extra 1 on the end have a side-effect of mounting a drive with the same name as the system already think exists. 


Do you see a MacSSD & a MacSSD1 ?


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Why After resetting the PRAM on my Mac Pro with OS High Sierra I have two desktop folders

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