Nathan Guinle

Q: Transferring to a new mac  assistance

I will be upgrading to a new mac next week. I don't want to do a complete migration via the migration assistant.

But I do want to transfer just a few things such as iTunes, mail and my documents.

Will migration assistant allow me to do just that..... or is it all or nothing?

Posted on May 13, 2015 5:31 PM

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Q: Transferring to a new mac  assistance

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  • by rkaufmann87,

    rkaufmann87 rkaufmann87 May 13, 2015 6:21 PM in response to Nathan Guinle
    Level 9 (58,795 points)
    Photos for Mac
    May 13, 2015 6:21 PM in response to Nathan Guinle

    Migration Assistant is an all or nothing. In your case move the data you want on the new iMac onto an external HD and when then drag them  from the EHD to the new iMac. Simple! Your e-mail will be more challenging, for that back up to a Time Machine and then connect that EHD to the new machine and restore the mail data to the new machine.

  • by Drew Reece,Helpful

    Drew Reece Drew Reece May 13, 2015 6:36 PM in response to Nathan Guinle
    Level 5 (7,694 points)
    Notebooks
    May 13, 2015 6:36 PM in response to Nathan Guinle

    It's all or nothing aside from the ability to select a few different items…

    Applications, Users & 'other files' can be migrated via Migration Assistant or the Setup Assistant.

     

    Applications has the habit of bringing over all supporting files, which is best avoided if you can stand reinstalling the apps you use.

    Users will create a user & move all their data into place. This could work OK for you, unless you have a lot of extra items that you really do not want from the old home folder. This will keep all your old settings.

    Other files is data that is kept elsewhere on the disk (it's a bad habit to keep important files a the root of the disk anyway - so this can usually be avoided too).

     

    iTunes is kept in the Music folder, Photos also has your iPhoto/ Photos DB.

     

    If you keep most of your Mail on the server there is very little to migrate. If you have a lot of local mailboxes then you may want to consider making archives of these to make moving simpler.

     

    You may also want to look at Target Disk mode - it makes the process of transferring files faster if you have the appropriate leads (Firewire or Thunderbolt).

    How to use and troubleshoot FireWire target disk mode - Apple Support

  • by Nathan Guinle,

    Nathan Guinle Nathan Guinle May 14, 2015 2:11 AM in response to Drew Reece
    Level 2 (166 points)
    iTunes
    May 14, 2015 2:11 AM in response to Drew Reece

    Thank you this gets me going in the right direction....!

    Looks like I should only migrate the user ......

    I keep most of my mail on the server  (90%). You state there will be very little to migrate.......

    I can handle the 10% but what is the very little you speak of?

  • by Drew Reece,

    Drew Reece Drew Reece May 14, 2015 8:19 AM in response to Nathan Guinle
    Level 5 (7,694 points)
    Notebooks
    May 14, 2015 8:19 AM in response to Nathan Guinle

    If you login to your webmail & compare the differences to your Mac you may get an idea of what will not migrate if you only setup the email client with the login details (e.g. setup the email account & resync the messages).

     

    Things like mail rules, signatures, viewing preferences & preferred account settings will not migrate unless you move all of Mails settings from a backup. You also want to consider where your contacts are stored if you do a manual migration, they may be synced with the email provider.

     

    Migrating the entire user via Migration Assistant will do all this for you.