Burn Users Guide
Burn Users Guide
Game Manuals · PDF
| Filename | Burn_Users_Guide.pdf |
|---|---|
| Size | 0.05 MB |
| Subsection | Burn |
| Downloads | 0 |
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Burn Users Guide http://www.thenextwave.com/burnguide.html
About Burn
No data security system would be complete without a way to destroy the original versions of a file
after they are encrypted. Burn provides exactly that function. It is a drag-and-drop application
under system 7. Files and folders dragged onto the Burn icon will be overwritten a user selected
number of times with a user selected pattern, then renamed, then deleted. Both data and resource
forks are deleted.
A variety of options allow you to configure the application to exactly the ease of use and security
you need. No matter what options you select, your trash will be far more secure than if you used
Apple's built in trash capabilities.
This application is not a replacement for the trash can. You should continue to drag unimportant
documents and applications to the trash can. When you drag a file to the Burn icon it will be
irretrievably deleted.
How to Destroy a File or Folder
To destroy a file or folder simply drag the desired item to the Burn icon and release the mouse
button. The item will be overwritten and deleted. You can also destroy a file or folder by double
clicking on the Burn application and then selecting "Delete..." from the file menu. You will be
prompted to select an item for destruction.
Warning: Burn does not handle alias's the same way the trash icon in the Macintosh Finder does.
If you drag an alias record to Burn (or open an alias from within the application) the ORIGINAL
file will be destroyed, not the alias.
Erasing Free Space on a Volume
Burn allows you to erase the contents of the free sectors on your disks. This option is useful if you
accidentally erased a sensitive file using the regular trash can, or if a file was deleted within an
application. It is very safe because what it does is create a temporary file the size of the free space
on your disk, and then burns that file. Thus there is no risk of Burn wandering off into parts of
your hard disk that it should not venture (well almost no risk, see the next paragraph).
Warning: Disks with a damaged directory can be further damaged if you Burn the free space. Be
certain your disks are healthy by running a utility program such as Apple's Disk First Aid before
using Burn's Erase Free Space command.
To use this feature select "Erase Free Space..." from the file menu. It will prompt you to select a
volume to clean. A status dialog will show the progress of the cleaning.
For maximum security you should periodically select this option.
Configuring the Application
The "Preferences..." option under the file menu of Burn allows you to cus…
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