One day you get the nasty message telling you that there is not enough free disk. Computer hard drives are getting bigger and bigger, and you think that there's lots of stuff you can hold on to. One day you get the nasty message telling you that there is not enough free disk space to save, copy, paste, or download. If you're getting an error message on your computer that says that your computer doesn't have enough disk space, this means that your hard drive is almost filled. ![]() Steam error 'You do not have enough disk space available to run this game. Please free up some disk space and try again.' I get this error regardless of the game I try to install. I have more than 15 GB free on my drive. I reset the permissions, checked the hard drive, tried to install a new steam directory on another hard drive. I've also tried to re-install Stream I am using Yosemite 10.10.1. Did not use steam for a while, but have no problems on my other systems. The 'how to uninstall and re-install steam' does not apply to Yosemite as far as I can tell. I have no library folder in my users/(my username) I am waiting on Steam support to help. You can import these files (.pst in Outlook for Windows and.olm in Outlook for Mac) into Outlook for Mac. Once imported, the archived email messages, contacts, calendar items, and so on are available in the On My Computer section of the Outlook navigation panes (Mail, Calendar, People, Tasks, and Notes). Tip: As an alternative to importing contacts from the Apple Address Book, you can turn on Sync Services for your Outlook contacts. Turning on Sync Services syncs your Outlook contacts with the Apple Address Book, MobileMe, and other applications or devices that you set up in Apple iSync. How is one supposed to import apple calendar data into outlook for mac 2016 calendar? When you click on import with outlook for mac 2016, there is no option for apple calendar imports, only outlook calendar imports. Navigate to the location where you want to save the iCal version of the Calendar. Enter the name for the iCal version of the Calendar in the File name field. Ensure that iCalendar format is selected in the 'Save as' type list. Click the 'More Options' button. Import calendar in outlook for mac. I have an open ticket, but would like to figure this out. I think it might be an easy fix - or I'll just have to wait. You might want to invest in an external hard drive to store some of your stuff. If you are around 15GB of free space, you are running pretty low. That said, I'm not sure why you wouldn't be able to install some smaller games anyway. It's possible the Mac is holding on to some of that space for a page file or something similar. As far as the Library folder you were talking about in your first post, the User Library was hidden starting in 10.6 or 10.7. To get there, click on Finder, then at the top of the screen select Go, then Go to Folder. In there type: ~/Library That will get you to it. The issue is a little confusing, but it's possible you've just run into one of the weird quirks with Steam on Mac. One thing you might look into is if you have any games that you know you had installed previously and aren't showing up in your Steam Library. In the Go to Folder. Field type this: ~/Library/Application Support/Steam/steamapps/common/ This should take you to a list of games you have installed on your machine. If you see some in there that aren't showing up in your Steam Library, try deleting them (ones you can live without for now). It may be that Steam is reading your disk space wrong because it's not sure what's installed and what isn't. ![]() I'm not sure if any of that will help, but I hope you get it figured out. I found a fix that works for me: The short story: just run a backup of your system to clear the purgeable space on the HD. I know this is an older thread but seeing as I didn't see the fix here, I thought I'd let you know how I got around this issue. I looked around the web and found out that it may have to do with the 'purgeable' space on the HD. These are files which Apple's OS cues for reclamation if needed. For example if you were going to copy or download a large file onto your HD it would reclaim as many purgeable files as necessary to make space. When I looked at 'About this Mac' it showed I had about 90 GB 'free space' on my drive but taking a look at 'Get Info' for my HD showed that 60 GB of it was 'purgeable' so that meant that 60 GB was actually still made up of files lingering on my drive waiting to be reclaimed. If it is an Apple app like Photos, iMovie, iTunes, etc needing that space, then the OS would accept the new large file coming inbound and would work through the purgeable space, deleting those files in the background as the new big file copies onto the drive. (Disclaimer: I am not an Apple tech so I don't know the exact goings on behind the scenes but I understand this is sort of what's happening) The problem seems to be with Steam looking at the HD and only seeing the actual free space.
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