You can make a difference in the Apple Support Community!

When you sign up with your Apple Account, you can provide valuable feedback to other community members by upvoting helpful replies and User Tips.

Looks like no one’s replied in a while. To start the conversation again, simply ask a new question.

Migrating to a new Apple M1 from an iMac Intel machine.

Are the migrating steps the same if I'm migrating to an M1 machine?

Thanks from Rob.

iMac (2017 – 2020)

Posted on Mar 29, 2023 11:15 AM

Reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Mar 29, 2023 11:19 AM

Migration to a new Mac is no different if the new Mac is an Apple-Silicon machine:


Move content to a new Mac - Apple support

Move content to a new Mac - Apple Support


Migration Assistant 'takes over' both computers, and takes a surprisingly long elapsed time. First it may need to compute a Spotlight index of the data. Once data transfer begins, it takes a bit longer than a FULL backup, likely all afternoon to overnight. You may want to set this up late in the day and let it run overnight, and be ready for it not to be done by morning.


"the best way" is to use your Time machine backup from the old Mac as the source for Migration Assistant running on the new Mac. USB-2 is as fast as almost every Rotating Magnetic drive, and will not produce a noticeable slowdown doing this transfer.


The way that always works but will seem really slow is using Wi-Fi through your Router.


If you could use Ethernet through your Router to BOTH Macs, that would be much faster. OR, if your old Mac is running 10.12 Sierra or later it can establish an Ad-hoc private Wi-fi connection to the new Mac when placed near the new Mac and both running Migration Assistant.


If your old Mac has no Thunderbolt-3 ports, Thunderbolt Bridge is off the table.


A USB cord sounds like a great idea, but does not work because USB is a local peripheral interface, and a Network interface is required, unless you can make your old Mac "look like a drive' to the new Mac.


Target Disk Mode can allow your old Mac to become a Hard drive, and it can be cable-connected to the new Mac. It requires ThunderBolt cable connection, so for a Thunderbolt-2 old Mac, you would need to obtain a Thunderbolt-3 <-> ThunderBolt-2 adapter (US$50) and a Thunderbolt-2 cable.


Transfer files between two Mac computers using target disk mode - Apple Support

Transfer files between two Mac computers using target disk mode - Apple Support


3 replies
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Mar 29, 2023 11:19 AM in response to proutr

Migration to a new Mac is no different if the new Mac is an Apple-Silicon machine:


Move content to a new Mac - Apple support

Move content to a new Mac - Apple Support


Migration Assistant 'takes over' both computers, and takes a surprisingly long elapsed time. First it may need to compute a Spotlight index of the data. Once data transfer begins, it takes a bit longer than a FULL backup, likely all afternoon to overnight. You may want to set this up late in the day and let it run overnight, and be ready for it not to be done by morning.


"the best way" is to use your Time machine backup from the old Mac as the source for Migration Assistant running on the new Mac. USB-2 is as fast as almost every Rotating Magnetic drive, and will not produce a noticeable slowdown doing this transfer.


The way that always works but will seem really slow is using Wi-Fi through your Router.


If you could use Ethernet through your Router to BOTH Macs, that would be much faster. OR, if your old Mac is running 10.12 Sierra or later it can establish an Ad-hoc private Wi-fi connection to the new Mac when placed near the new Mac and both running Migration Assistant.


If your old Mac has no Thunderbolt-3 ports, Thunderbolt Bridge is off the table.


A USB cord sounds like a great idea, but does not work because USB is a local peripheral interface, and a Network interface is required, unless you can make your old Mac "look like a drive' to the new Mac.


Target Disk Mode can allow your old Mac to become a Hard drive, and it can be cable-connected to the new Mac. It requires ThunderBolt cable connection, so for a Thunderbolt-2 old Mac, you would need to obtain a Thunderbolt-3 <-> ThunderBolt-2 adapter (US$50) and a Thunderbolt-2 cable.


Transfer files between two Mac computers using target disk mode - Apple Support

Transfer files between two Mac computers using target disk mode - Apple Support


Mar 25, 2024 1:11 PM in response to proutr

<< Should I plug my Time Machine drive directly into the new M1 Mac?>>


If you can, yes. Then it becomes a local device, and the migration can proceed slightly faster. but more importantly, it does not 'swamp' you network while it works.


USB-2 is about the same speed as almost every rotating magnetic drive, so no points off for a USB-2 connection.



Migrating to a new Apple M1 from an iMac Intel machine.

Welcome to Apple Support Community
A forum where Apple customers help each other with their products. Get started with your Apple Account.