Film, Media & TV61 mins ago
PC to Mac
6 Answers
I have had a PC for a few years now, but I'm thinking of changing and getting a Mac, but I have lots of files/pictures and my itunes library that I really don't want to loose.
I was thinking of getting an external hard drive and transferring everything over that way, but I just wanted to ask if there was an easier or better way of doing it before I went ahead and bought it all.
Thanks in advance....
I was thinking of getting an external hard drive and transferring everything over that way, but I just wanted to ask if there was an easier or better way of doing it before I went ahead and bought it all.
Thanks in advance....
Answers
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Buy the external hard drive. It'll come in useful.
Copy all your stuff onto the drive.
Once your new Mac is ready, connect the drive and transfer your files across (there are specific places for this stuff -- each user has a Pictures folder, Music folder, etc.). But you're better just opening iPhoto and dragging your photos into that (automatically put in the correct directory), and the same with your music and iTunes.
Once you're sure that your music and everything else is all nicely on your Mac as well as your old PC, go into /Applications/Utilities/Disk utility.app.
With this, click your external drive on the left, and choose the 'erase' tab to erase the drive and reformat as one big 'HFS+' drive.
Once done, (you may need to disconnect and reconnect the drive), a message will pop up asking if you want to use Time Machine with this drive. Choose yes, and your entire system will be backed up to this external drive, and then changes will be backed up every hour.
That way, you now have a very good backup of all your stuff.
Copy all your stuff onto the drive.
Once your new Mac is ready, connect the drive and transfer your files across (there are specific places for this stuff -- each user has a Pictures folder, Music folder, etc.). But you're better just opening iPhoto and dragging your photos into that (automatically put in the correct directory), and the same with your music and iTunes.
Once you're sure that your music and everything else is all nicely on your Mac as well as your old PC, go into /Applications/Utilities/Disk utility.app.
With this, click your external drive on the left, and choose the 'erase' tab to erase the drive and reformat as one big 'HFS+' drive.
Once done, (you may need to disconnect and reconnect the drive), a message will pop up asking if you want to use Time Machine with this drive. Choose yes, and your entire system will be backed up to this external drive, and then changes will be backed up every hour.
That way, you now have a very good backup of all your stuff.
Hard drives usually connect with either USB or Firewire. Both are compatible with PC and Mac.
However, you format the drive with a certain filesystem. Windows uses its own filesystem, and Macs use their own.
FAT32, an older system, can be read by all systems. So it's best to format with this to copy stuff from one machine to another. (So format to this on Windows before copying your stuff onto it.)
Time Machine uses some advanced stuff that FAT32 can't do though (multiple hard links, essentially), so you have to use HFS+ for that, which makes it only work on a Mac. (Though you can get some programs to make it readable on Windows too.)
As for drives: don't shop at PC World or the like if you can help it. ebuyer.com and amazon.co.uk are great, and you'll get a better deal. Seagate, Western Digital (WD), Maxtor, LaCie are all good brands. Just go for what you can afford, with the largest size possible. Right now the good price/capacity point is around the 500GB mark.
Whatever drive, since it's going to be used for backup, try and make sure it has a lot more capacity than the Mac's internal drive. If the Mac comes with 250GB, then a 500GB will be very useful.
However, you format the drive with a certain filesystem. Windows uses its own filesystem, and Macs use their own.
FAT32, an older system, can be read by all systems. So it's best to format with this to copy stuff from one machine to another. (So format to this on Windows before copying your stuff onto it.)
Time Machine uses some advanced stuff that FAT32 can't do though (multiple hard links, essentially), so you have to use HFS+ for that, which makes it only work on a Mac. (Though you can get some programs to make it readable on Windows too.)
As for drives: don't shop at PC World or the like if you can help it. ebuyer.com and amazon.co.uk are great, and you'll get a better deal. Seagate, Western Digital (WD), Maxtor, LaCie are all good brands. Just go for what you can afford, with the largest size possible. Right now the good price/capacity point is around the 500GB mark.
Whatever drive, since it's going to be used for backup, try and make sure it has a lot more capacity than the Mac's internal drive. If the Mac comes with 250GB, then a 500GB will be very useful.
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