To get the 'eject' action (the thing that goes in the second pane), you'd go to Prefs -> Actions and tick/untick the 'eject' action
If you don't want Quicksilver to always wake up your disks, you could tell Quicksilver to only manually scan for changes in the catalog. You would do this by going into the catalog prefs pane then at the bottom changing the rescan dropdown to 'manually' To rescan, all you'd have to do would be to activate QS, then press CMD + R shortcut for rescan. On 12 April 2011 16:58, Pier <[email protected]> wrote: > Yes I'm indexing those disks. > > Those are external disks btw, and I can't see the eject button on QS. > > > On Apr 12, 1:11 am, Patrick Robertson <[email protected]> > wrote: > > do you have the disks either: > > > > a) In your catalog of Quicksilver - check the catalog pref pane and see > if > > you're indexing them > > b) have the 'Mounted Disks' proxy object checked under Prefs -> Catalog > -> > > Quicksilver -> Proxy Objects -> Click the 'i' -> Go to the contents tab > > c) Not sure about this one, but do you have the 'eject' action enabled in > > Quicksilver > > > > The next release should stop the hang caused by the 'eject' action, if > this > > is your problem > > > > On 12 April 2011 14:42, Pier <[email protected]> wrote: > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > When I invoke QS it freezes for a few seconds until all disks are > > > awake. > > > > > Why is that? > > > > > Not only it is annoying... those sleeping disks are asleep for a > > > reason (to save energy). If I'm not searching anything on those disks > > > I don't understand the need. >
