Name of boot drive - important or trivial?
Is the name of your boot drive technically important, or is it merely a nostalgic convention for it to be named "Macintosh Hard Drive" and could it be named anything you want? Are there any consequences to changing the name of the boot drive after you've been using it a while?
Why I ask...
I've just gone through some hardware changes: on my old iMac, the internal "fusion" drive has been failing (bad sectors turning up more frequently with the passage of time). So I went through the process of replacing it, doing a clean OS installation and migrating all my files, apps, settings, etc to a new boot drive. That process is now complete, I've been working off the new boot drive for about 24 hours, apps working, accounts functional, all seems good.
The old boot drive (probably no longer to be used) is of course named "Macintosh HD" (which has always been, I think, the default name of the boot drive ever since mud was new). For my new boot drive, I bought an external SSD drive. The default name I gave that drive when I formatted it is something like "Samsung T7 SSD".
Now that I've done a clean install and migrated everything, the iMac boots off the new drive perfectly and all the apps I've tried so far seem to be working. But it's a little confusing to see the boot drive with an odd name. I can simply (first) change the name of the OLD boot drive to something like "OLD Drive Don't Use" and then simply rename the new "Samsung T7 SSD" to "Macintosh HD" (or maybe "Macintosh SSD HD").
If I go re-naming the old and new boot drives, should I expect any issues, or (as I suspect), are drive names just a convenience for us humans, and we can call them whatever we want, change their names willy-nilly, and the Mac won't care at all (because the drive "names" are just labels for us humans, and under the hood, everything keeps track of physical drives using other methods that are largely hidden from us mere users/owners/payers)?
Thanks.
Earlier Mac models