Apple Event: May 7th at 7 am PT

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

Migration Assistant in OS X 10.4.10 doesn't have a 'to another Mac' option

Last week my faithful old MacBook from 2006 finally became unusable, and so I'm now the proud owner of a new Air. However, I'm having some problems migrating from the one to the other: Migration Assistant on the old Mac only offers the options of migrating from another Mac, or to another volume in the same computer. This is, of course, utterly baffling and really frustrating.


Any ideas/solutions?

MacBook, Mac OS X (10.4.10)

Posted on Jul 22, 2012 8:44 AM

Reply
Question marked as Best reply

Posted on Jul 22, 2012 8:47 AM

Some have been able to "migrate" by starting the 10.4 machine in target disk mode attached to the new Mac and then transfer material hard drive to hard drive.

37 replies

Jul 26, 2012 11:07 AM in response to Pondini

It's not mounted as a shared volume. If you simply connect to another Mac via network, you don't have access to the entire HD.


As an admin I can share a whole OS volume and give it read access to everyone. When mounted elsewhere I have access to everything except a few folders in other users' home folders. Would this be sufficient for MA?

Jul 26, 2012 12:23 PM in response to Neville Hillyer

Neville Hillyer wrote:

. .

As an admin I can share a whole OS volume and give it read access to everyone. When mounted elsewhere I have access to everything except a few folders in other users' home folders. Would this be sufficient for MA?

No. (And how would those "except" folders get transferred?)


Why are you trying to avoid using it the way it was designed? It works fine. A workaround isn't needed.

Jul 26, 2012 2:03 PM in response to Pondini

As an Engineer I am trying to explore the technical limitations of MA and why they exist. It appears to be a very poorly described piece of software. Apart from a few badly written menus for its use I have not found much further information especially a satisfactory technical explanation for various aspects. Where does it say that many of the limitations are driven by permissions rather than anything else? Apple could have got around these artificial barriers.

Jul 26, 2012 2:10 PM in response to Neville Hillyer

The Apple articles are very clear, step-by-step User Instructions, showing exactly how to migrate from a Mac, it's backups, or (to Lion or Mountain Lion) a PC, under various circumstances.


They're not tecnhical documents.


If you want to get under the covers of how things work, see the Developer documentation and/or forums.


Since you have two Macs, experiment!

Jul 27, 2012 1:39 AM in response to Pondini

Thanks for all your help with this.


I plan to experiment when I have more time.


I will try and test my theory that much depends upon permissions and moutability and that perhaps MA can be coaxed to work single ended between Macs over ethernet and perhaps the internet.


Does anybody know how to connect two Macs on the same domestic router so that the communication goes via some remote location to simulate internet use?

Jul 27, 2012 7:03 AM in response to BDAqua

Thanks but that was not quite what I had in mind.


I would like a simple loopback without any software.


I wish my router would allow me to do this but when I use my fixed IP it connects me internally rather than via the internet. I have been able to do this before in other environments but I no longer have access to those facilities.


In other words I would like two way communication with eg IP A.B.C.D and have it reroute the communication to my fixed IP.

Migration Assistant in OS X 10.4.10 doesn't have a 'to another Mac' option

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