How to transfer your data from an old macbook to a newer thunderbolt macbook or macbook air. Apple has a great piece of software called ‘Setup Assistant’ that automatically transfers all your settings and programs from your old Apple computer to your new one. You connect the two computers with an Ethernet (or firewire) cable, run ‘Migration Assistant’ on your old computer, and then ‘Setup Assistant’ on the new computer does the rest.
The Mac has a great app called Migration Assistant that is very helpful when setting up a new Mac and you need to transfer files from an old Mac. Jim O’Reilly asks a great question about using Migration Assistant: If I use Migration Assistant, how can I avoid writing over on the new Mac files with the same name as the corresponding files from the old Mac? While Migration Assistant is relatively straightforward to use, it does have settings that let you twiddle what’s transferred.
Typically, after you and connect two Macs, you’re given the option to transfer four kinds of things:. Applications. User accounts. Other files and folders, which covers the Shared folder in the Users folder and folders you created at the top level of a drive. Computer & Network Settings You can also expand user accounts and Computer & Network Settings to de-select particular items as well. In most cases, your best bet is to do the full migration. Although it’s not documented, Migration Assistant doesn’t overwrite new versions of applications with older ones, which may be one of your concerns.
For user accounts, Apple won’t overwrite an account with the same name by default. Migration Assistant prompts you about whether you want to rename the account from the old computer or overwrite the account on the new computer with the files from the old Mac.
Files stored outside user accounts won’t be overwritten, but they could be merged, so a folder might contain a collection of old and new files. As always, don’t expect everything to go perfectly well! Make a full backup of your new computer in case any files you want to retain are unintentionally erased. Ask Mac 911 We’ve compiled a list of the questions we get asked most frequently along with answers and links to columns: to see if your question is covered. If not, we’re always looking for new problems to solve!
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