

- #MAC MOVE FILES TO EXTERNAL DRIVE SOFTWARE#
- #MAC MOVE FILES TO EXTERNAL DRIVE FREE#
- #MAC MOVE FILES TO EXTERNAL DRIVE MAC#
#MAC MOVE FILES TO EXTERNAL DRIVE MAC#
Connect the source Mac to the destination Mac with an appropriate cable.Open System Preferences > Startup Disk, click the lock button and enter your administrator credentials, click Target Disk Mode, and then click Restart.Restart the Mac, and once it starts booting, hold down the T key until you see the Target Disk Mode screen with a bouncing Thunderbolt logo.To use Target Disk Mode to copy data between Macs, follow these steps:

Booting one Mac from another in Target Disk Mode works best if the two Macs are of the same model and vintage and are running the same version of macOS, but it might work even if those facts aren’t true. You can also use Target Disk Mode on an old Mac to set up a new Mac with Migration Assistant, repair its drive using Disk Utility, or possibly even boot another Mac with it.
#MAC MOVE FILES TO EXTERNAL DRIVE SOFTWARE#
There’s no software to configure nor any permissions to worry about.
#MAC MOVE FILES TO EXTERNAL DRIVE FREE#
If you had an external hard drive with sufficient free space handy, you could copy all the data to it from one Mac and then copy the data back off to another Mac. You can send files via AirDrop, attach them to an email message, put them in a Messages conversation, turn on and connect via File Sharing, or use Dropbox or Google Drive as an intermediary, to name just a few of the more obvious approaches.īut what if you have a lot of data-say tens or even hundreds of gigabytes-to transfer from one Mac to another? The techniques listed above might work, but we wouldn’t bet on it. We have an embarrassment of riches when it comes to the number of ways we can move data between Macs.
