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Jul 28, 2011 10:30 PM in response to barubinby William Boyd, Jr.,That approach may work with "plain" documents, but won't work for files that belong to applications like Mail, Safari, or Address Book. The files that go with the newer versions of those applications aren't compatible with the older versions.
How do you plan to "move all of the users accounts to a different drive"? Copying those files with the Finder won't necessarily work well.
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Jul 29, 2011 8:34 AM in response to William Boyd, Jr.by barubin,There are a few discussions here on the topic that I was planning to employ:
Moving Home folder to different HDD From Mac OSX Snow Leopard via Terminal?
Moving some Users to different volume
How do you move a user account to a different drive?
Another way of doing it is to move the directory, and then alter the user's home directory using the NetInfo utility (Tiger) or Directory Utility (Leopard). In both, you can change the user's home directory from the command line in Terminal.app like so:
$ sudo dscl . -create /Users/user NFSHomeDirectory /Volumes/volname+/+user
In the SL System Preferences -> Accounts one can select a user's account, right click and choose Advance Options presents the screen below. This is how I intend to point each OS to the same user account on an external HDD.
Does that answer your question?
TIA.
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Jul 29, 2011 8:37 AM in response to barubinby William Boyd, Jr.,It sounds like you've found some good advice about how to move user folders. However, there's still the issue of incompatibiity of data for the applications that I mentioned (and others) across versions.
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Jul 29, 2011 8:45 AM in response to William Boyd, Jr.by barubin,William Boyd, Jr. wrote:
However, there's still the issue of incompatibiity of data for the applications that I mentioned (and others) across versions.
Well, that's why I asked the question. Nobody uses Mail, I'm the only one that uses Address Book, and the others use Firefox, not Safari. I know how to tell which applications won't work with Lion because of the lack of Rosetta. How can I determine which applications have new/incompatible file formats?
TIA.
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Jul 29, 2011 8:56 AM in response to barubinby William Boyd, Jr.,I would presume that any Apple application that has user data has changed its format for Lion. It sounds like Address Book and Safari are the two that will affect you the most.
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Jul 29, 2011 9:06 AM in response to William Boyd, Jr.by barubin,William Boyd, Jr. wrote:
I would presume that any Apple application that has user data has changed its format for Lion.
What has changed in Lion that you "presume that any Apple application that has user data has changed its format for Lion"?
I haven't read anything in the public domain, yet, that would indicate such an issue.
TIA.
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Jul 29, 2011 12:55 PM in response to barubinby William Boyd, Jr.,barubin wrote:
What has changed in Lion that you "presume that any Apple application that has user data has changed its format for Lion"?
How about all the software version numbers?
- Safari 5.0.x vs. 5.1 (although this won't be as big a problem with the release of Safari 5.1 for Snow Leopard)
- Mail 4.5 vs. 5.1
- iCal 4.0.4 vs. 5.0
I haven't read anything in the public domain, yet, that would indicate such an issue.
You won't see anything, mainly because each of these applications performs any necessary conversion of user data the first time it's launched, and few people want to do what you want to, which is to use the same user directory for Snow Leopard and Lion. That's the real trick.
