Can a 210Mb disk0s1 volume be a reason why my MBP is slow to boot...?
Hi all!
I was browsing my "About this Mac" informations, and stumbled upon a strange entry in "Serial ATA": there, I found I actually had two volumes, or disks; one was labeled "disk0s2", and is my startup, Macintosh HD volume. The other one is labeled "disk0s01", is only 209.7Mb worth, and seems to precede the main volume in boot order (or maybe I got it all wrong; if that's the case, gloves off!). Could that mean that on startup, this small volume is the first to be read by the processor and logic board, only to be deemed non bootable, which leads to the second, much bigger volume, to be examined and booted?
Or is quite normal, since maybe this small volume hosts a partition table or some such thing?
MacBook Pro 2006, Mac OS X (10.6.5), 2GB RAM - Longing for a 17" MacBook Pro with the i5 chip...