Cloning Old iMac G4 HD to new (not Intel) G5 iMac HD????

I have a 3yr old white round-base, flat panel iMac and need to replicate my 60gb hard drive to a new 160gb G5 (not Intel version) iMac flat panel hard drive??? I plan to connect the 2 via a Firewire cable, then transfer the hard drive contents..any recommendations on how I should do this? Any input would be appreciated...Thanks!

Hi,Several different options including:
Target mode. Switch off the iMac G4. Connect the two machines via FW. Boot the iMac G4 holding down 'T'. You'll then enter 'Firewire Target Mode'. On the iMac G5 the iMac G4's hard disk will appear underneath Macintosh HD (but will be coloured orange) - I'd rename them to something other than Macintosh HD to avoid confusion. You can then drag and drop at your will. Just drag the orange icon to the trash when you're finished and hold in the iMac's power button to switch it off.
Use Tiger's Migration Assistant that automates and guides you through the above. MA will copy about 99% of your settings/documents/applications, icon positions, desktop picture, dock items etc. But most users notice a few errors/items not working properly - hence why I say 99%. MA can be found in Macintosh HD > Applications > Utilities > Migration Assistant.
HTH
mrtotes

Similar Messages

  • Cloning Old (2007) MacBook Pro to new MacBook Pro

    I may have to buy a new Macbook Pro. My old one may have liquid damage (beer). It boots fine, every is fine but the keyboard is not functioning.
    So If I buy the new one, can I just use carbon copy cloner to clone my existing drive to my new machine so that I am up and running with all my Apps and data as quickly as possible. Everything on the machine is up to date as far as versions goes.

    You can. Also you can connect the old Mac to the new Mac via firewire in target disk mode, this way just choose to transfer data from a different Mac as you build the new Mac. This way all is done for you and you have a brand new build.
    Better still get a new keyboard fitted and save money unless you want to buy a new Mac.

  • I bought a new iMac and am giving my old iMac to my brother.  I do not have my installation disk.  How do I erase all my information?

    I recently bought a new iMac and am giving my old iMac to my brother.  I read up on how to erase my information before handing it over to my brother but they process included having my installation disk.  I do not have that disk.  I need to erase my information and upgrade the computer.

    "Tiger Tiger burning bright ..." (sorry for the poetic diversion ...)
    You can call Apple Customer Support, give them the serial number of the unit and pay $16 per disk to get new copies.  But they may not re-burn Tiger anymore.
    If that is the case, you have to consider buying Tiger disks from an online store, or move up in the cat family.
    Leopard disks only require PPC processors, and run $180 or so.  Apple *may* have some Leopard in stock if you call them.  Else you go online.
    If the sysem has Intel processor, you can jump up to Snow Leopard, which is $29 in the Apple Online Store.
    AppleMenu > About This Mac ... what is the memory amount and processor type?

  • Setting up a WiFi network from iMac... works on "old" iMac, not "new"

    Hello,
    I hope I'm not crazy, or even worse, stupid.
    I an running two iMacs in my home office. Old one= 21" 2 Ghz PowerPC G5, purchased summer 2005 and still running like a champ.  New one=27" 2.7 Ghz Intel i5. Purchased the new one July 2011. I have a cable modem plugged into the ethernet port on the old iMac. I've been accessing internet on new iMac with wifi and the internet sharing network I set up on old one. I also use wifi on my ipad and laptop. I have never had even a single dropped wifi connection on any of these devices.
    I pretty much expected the same kind of result and performance when I reset the cable modem and plugged it into the new imac and took similiar steps to set up  internet sharing/wifi network on new iMac. This has not been the case.
    What's happening is:
    The cable modem plugged to new iMac is working fine; verified with ISP. I set up wifi network on new iMac and turn on internet sharing. I locate my network name on ipad, laptop, even the old iMac, and I see the name in the list, so I figure so far so good. The signal icon appears in menu bar as usual. I open a web site to verify it's working. And it's working...for about 20 seconds. Then I get alert messages that there is no internet connection.
    After creating a bunch of new networks and changing channels, changing type of security, even passwords, I realized I wasn't going to figure this out by myself. I'm not a technical person; Apple spoiled me and I stopped learning how to do anything except plug stuff in 20 years ago.
    I started researching online including these discussion boards and answers have ranged from "It's the iMac! It's a hardware problem they never fixed! The aluminum case gets too hot!" to, "there's no airport card and you have to buy an external router."  I gave up and called Apple, thinking surely they'd be able to give me a straight answer. Ha ha. Nope.
    Of course the bottom line is I could buy applecare (haven't yet...haven't used the computer hardly and I'm still under warranty), I could buy telephone tech support, or I can take the machine to the geniuses.
    I keep thinking this can't be that complicated. When I buy a new iMac--this is my 4th one--I expect things will get easier, not this complicated mess.
    Oh, last I want to include I just reversed everything back to the way it was. My old iMac is connected to the cable modem and the old iMac is back to being my wifi network, sharing internet with the new imac, my ipad and laptop. Easy as pie.
    I'm making an appointment with the geniuseses but hoping it's just something I'm too dumb to realize I'm doing wrong.
    Thank you in advance for your patience; any help is much appreciated!

    SuznK66 wrote:
    It never occurred to me that the wireless network/internet sharing thing wouldn't work just as well if not better on a brand new machine with the improved technologies I pretty much expect. Metal could be interfering with the signal? The machine is aluminum!! I'm no engineer but that seems kind of...flawed.  I just don't understand.
    I think the WiFi antenna is near an edge of the computer to avoid being encased in metal. It should work like t did in your old computer, but as I said, the use of a Mac to share an internet signal is much less common than use of a router so even if the newer computers have a non-optimal design, it might not get widely noticed in forums like these.
    Sounds like AppleCare is what you want, so I'd get it and then have them check that your Mac is transmitting thru the wireless card/antenna as strongly as it should be. The antenna clearly works as you can RECEIVE a signal, but the transmitter uses different circuitry than the receiver. By the way, I think AppleCare is a good thing to get for iMacs and for laptops as they are very compact and tend to be more prone to thermal problems than other desktop computers.
    I have no idea about routers aside from, of course, the apple air port one that the phone tech support guy mentioned. Are there others that are less money and just as good? I don't feel like rewarding apple for selling me a product that doesn't do what the earlier geration machines did without a problem. Seems like they shouldn't make another $200 because of their flaw. My old iMac's wifi signal was strong enough for a 3500 square foot house, 2 laptops and an iphone.
    Would getting an external router definitely solve my problem? Which one would you recommend if I go that route?
    I also did not understand why the Apple routers (Airport) were so much more expensive than other brands. So I purchased a linksys n router some years ago and it has worked quite well. They are very easy to configure through an ordinary web browser (some Mac folks prefer the Airport utilities that are used to configure the Airport routers, but I find the web browser interface very easy to use for the non-Apple routers), and they are in very widespread use (linksys isn't the only brand that is good for this, there are others, but I've had good experience with both Belkin and Linksys). You can get very high performing n routers from Belkin and Linksys for under $100. I'd get a router that has dual band (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz), and I think most include standard features like MAC filtering (a security measure), WPA2 security, and I thiink offering Gigabit ethernet ports would be good also in case you connect something to it like a hard drive server or a printer or want a fast local network sometime in the future.
    I think the router will solve your problem and do a better job of wirelessly distributing your internet signal, but if the problem is due to a faulty wireless card (that receives fine but doesn't transmit properly) in the new iMac, I'd want to get that fixed under warranty (or AppleCare) now rather than later.
    One more thing: if your wireless card in the new iMac is working properly but the physical layout is such that the internet sharing isn't working well, you OUGHT to be able to eventually get it to work by moving the other devices you are sharing with around to different locations, as eventually one should end up in a spot that works. If nothing can receive the shared internet from the new iMac, even when 3 feet away, then something might well be wrong with the new iMac's transmitter. 

  • HT202853 I have many project made in move HD that are not updating to the new iMovie 10 on my new iMac.  Why is this not working as stated?  How do I get my projects back from backup after old iMac crashed?

    I have many projects made in imovie HD that are not updating to iMovie 10 on my new iMac.  Why is this not working as stated on the article HT202853?  How do I get my projects back from backup after old iMac crashed?

    According to:
    Update projects and events from previous versions of iMovie in iMovie (2014) - Apple Support
    you can update from iMovie versions 7, 8 and 9, but iMovie HD is iMovie 6.
    Maybe you can update in two steps, first from iMovie 6 to iMovie 7, 8 or 9 then to iMovie 10. 
    Geoff.

  • Mail downloads on old iMac and iPhone but not new iMac

    Just bought a new iMac. Transferred all the settings. However if I download my email from my old iMac it won't show up on the new one unless I check it on the new machine first. Can I get all my mail accounts to download all my messages? ie I don't want messages to only be downloaded/available on the machine I happen to check mail on first. Checking my mail from the iPhone doesn't cause this problem. Any suggestions?

    Hello,
    Is this a Gmail account? If so, then the issue is with how Gmail works with POP access. If you using Gmail on more than one computer you should switch to IMAP.
    If not Gmail, but if it is POP, then on all Macs check the settings in Mail Preferences/Accounts/Advanced regarding leaving messages on the server.
    More info, please.
    Ernie

  • My old iMac and OS 10.4 will not accept the New iTunes Version 10 application and I can't get past the screen offering to download iTunes 10.  This is wrong and I need help getting past this situation. Help!

    My old iMac and OS 10.4 will not accept the New iTunes Version 10 application and I can't get past the screen offering to download iTunes 10.  This is wrong and I need help getting past this situation. Help!

    Sure, you can get around it if you don't need the newest version of iTunes. I still use version 7.5 because the newer versions didn't strike me as offering anything I needed.
    If you do need a version 10-something then you will have to upgrade your operating system to Leopard (fi your computer will support it) at least.  If you need 10.5 for some reason then there's no getting around it, you will have to buy a new computer.

  • Just bought a new iMac, with Lion, for my wife.  When is was wifi with her old iMac on line with it's printer, HP C6200, no problems printing.  Now that it is by itself it does not recognize the C6200...It recognizes my laser hp 1012 and laser hp 6300

    Just bought a new iMac, with Lion, for my wife.  When is was wifi with her old iMac on line with it's printer, HP C6200, no problems printing.  Now that it is by itself it does not recognize the C6200...It recognizes my laser hp 1012 and laser hp 6300 but will not print to them wanting an autenication

    How is the C6200 connected to the iMac, is it via USB or Wi-Fi? If it's via Wi-Fi please make sure it's connected to the router using the printer's Network Wizard. Then click System Preferences - Print & Scan and assuming the iMac is on the same network as the printer, if it is the printer should be seen. If it's not then click the + sign and add the printer. Apple provides instructions in Printing Overview OS X Lion

  • After migrating a new Mac Book Pro from Time Capsule, I noticed that I lost a group of Favorites on the older iMac. The puzzling thing is that the Favorites are on my iPhone--not the old iMac or the new Mac Book Pro. How do I get the Favorites back?

    After migrating a new Mac Book Pro from Time Capsule, I noticed that I lost a group of Favorites on the older iMac. The puzzling thing is that the Favorites are on my iPhone--not the old iMac or the new Mac Book Pro. How do I get the Favorites back?

    If you are syncing using iCloud, try going to System Preferences/iCloud (computers) and checking Safari. If it is checked, try deselecting it, wait 10-15 seconds, and then check it again.

  • Upgrade the old iMac before migrating to a new one or not?

    Hi all,
    I am planning to buy a new iMac and would like to migrate some of my stuff to it from an old iMac. And then I would also like to migrate some of my stuff from a still older MacBook onto this old iMac. Complicated enough? :-)
    In short:
    Step one: stuff from my 5 year old iMac with OS 10.7.5 Lion on it migrates to -----> a brand new iMac with Yosemite.
    Step two: stuff from my 8 year old MacBook with OS 10.5.8 on it (and not upgradable any further) migrates to -----> the 5 year old iMac with OS 10.7.5 Lion on it.
    Now, my questions are these:
    1) Should I first upgrade the 5 year old iMac with OS 10.7.5 Lion on it to Yosemite before migrating my stuff from it to a brand new iMac with preinstalled Yosemite or not? Recommended, not recommended, neutral, what?
    2) If the answer to the 1st question is "yes" (recommended), will I then be able to migrate my stuff from the 8 year old MacBook with OS 10.5.8 onto it? That is, will the two migration assistants (of OS 10.9 and OS 10.5) "talk" to each other at all?
    Any further tips will be hugely appreciated!
    Lots of thanks in advance!

    Hi rkaufmann87,
    thank you so much for your reply!
    I am afraid you misunderstood me a little bit… While you kindly explain to me ways of how to migrate my data from one computer to another, my question was not so much about "how" but rather about "whether":
    a) should I first upgrade my old iMac (with 10.7.5 Lion on it) to Yosemite before migrating its data to the new iMac with preinstalled Yosemite? Will it help in any way or is it irrelevant?
    b) and if the answer is "yes" (i. e. upgrade the old iMac to Yosemite), whether the migration assistant on the 8 year old MB will then be able to "talk" to its counterpart on the now upgraded old iMac?
    Perhaps this too might help:
    What I am trying to do is make two computers out of three -
    1) My wife's 8 year old MacBook will most probably go to the dustbin. Before it does, I would like to migrate her data to my 5 year old iMac which will then replace her MB (in the dustbin) and be hers forever after.
    2) I will certainly have to migrate my own data from my 5 year old iMac to the new iMac which I am about to buy.
    So the question remains: upgrade the old iMac for both purposes (s. above - #1 and #2) from Lion to Yosemite - yes, no, doesn't matter, what?
    Many thanks again!

  • Old imac (Tiger)not transfered internet settings to new mac (Leopard

    Hi,
    I used firewire and the instructions, as prompted from my new Imac Intel Core 2 Duo to transfer my information from my old iMac power pc it tranferred iphoto and photos but not songs in itunes which I did from an external hard drive.
    All my e-mails, e-mail addresses and address book contacts have not been transferred but more importantly my internet settings have not been transferred and I just cannot get in touch with the ISP.
    I thought it was a simple case of my old mac sending info to the new one and away I go. I have to use the old one to post this!
    Help please. Basic instructions appreciated. Many thanks.
    George UK

    Hi Roger,
    My faith in macs has been restored! I did as you suggested re network, that didnt do the trick. So I spoke to ISP and a very simple instructions were given I unplugged the cable modem, switched off and unplugged my mac, inserted the ethernet plug, replugged the modem replugged the mac and switched the mac on. Bingo!! On line with e-mails and address book details. it has to be in that order they said.
    many thanks for your help. I will post this one in case it helps others.
    cheers George UK

  • I just got one of the new iMac.  following the on screen instructions to do migration assist.  I guess it connected via wifi to my old iMac.  now it seems to have stopped.  what can I do to not mess it all up?  how long will it take on wifi?

    I just got a new iMac.  was following the onscreen instructions to do migration assistance and I guess it connected to my old iMac via wi fi. It never instructed me to connect via firewire.  Now it seems to have stopped.  what can I do that won't completely mess it up?  how Long will it take to do over wi fi?

    Your new iMac does not have a Firewire port so you ned this adapter:
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD464ZM/A/apple-thunderbolt-to-firewire-adapte r
    to connect the two machines together and migrate simply follow the instructions in:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4413?viewlocale=en_US&locale=en_US#1

  • My new 3 month old imac 27 with 10.6.8 snow is giving a **** of noise from the fan. suddently starting after today starting up. and the volume buttoms and screen lights up and down not working any more.. any one who can help here???

    my new 3 month old imac 27 with 10.6.8 snow is giving a **** of noise from the fan. suddently starting after today starting up. and the volume buttoms and screen lights up and down not working any more.. any one who can help here???

    Try an SMC Reset. (System Management Controller)
    Shutdown>unplug from power for ten minutes>press and hold in the power button for ten seconds>startup again.
    Also try a PRAM Reset. (Parameter RAM)
    Shutdown. At the bootup chime, hold down CMD-Option-P-R together, wait for two more chimes, total three, then let go of all keys to finish booting,
    If this doesn't do it, run the Hardware Test in Extended
    http://support.apple.com/kb/ht1509

  • Trackpad do not work properly after migration data from old imac to new macbook pro

    After migration all my Data from my old imac to my new macbook pro (both running on OS Maverick) with migration assistant, the trackpad of the new macbook pro doesn´t work properly any more.
    But the trackpad had worked properly before the data migration!
    But now the trackpad feature of scrolling up and down with two fingers doesn´t work. (Other features are ok.)
    I have tried to change the trackpad settings, but still doesn´t work.
    Can anyone help me???

    You are still under warranty.  Call Apple Care. Make sure you get a case number as all repairs have an additional 90 days of warranty. 
    #1 - You have 14 days from the date of purchase to return your computer with no questions asked.
    #2 - You have 90 days of FREE phone tech support.
    #3 - You have the standard one year Apple warranty.
    #4 - If you've purchased an AppleCare Protection Plan, your warranty last for 3 years.   You can obtain AppleCare anytime up to the first year of the purchase of your computer.
    Take FULL advantage of your warranty.  Posting on a message board should be done as a last resort and if you are out of warranty or Apple Care has expired.

  • New life for old iMac

    My Dad still uses his circa 1998 iMac Rev. D tray loader, since I've kept it alive and up to date by replacing its dead CD-ROM drive from one I bought on eBay, installing more memory (256 MB I think), and OS updates through Panther. He's a cheapskate like me and doesn't want to shell out $1000 for a new iMac. However, lately he's complained this dinosaur was starting to run slow, no surprise since even with a minimal installation of X a few music files and emailed videos left him with less than 400 MB free space on the HD, causing multiple instances of "your startup disk is almost full" messages. Remember this computer shipped with a gargantuan 32 MB memory and a whopping 6 GB hard disk. It ran the latest incarnation of Apple's OS which was OS 8.5. No Firewire on this baby either, so expansion options are limited.
    I reasoned I could remove its diminutive 6 GB HD and install the 30 GB HD I pulled from my iMac DV SE some time ago, giving the old iMac some room to breathe. But how to preserve the contents of the hard disk without having to reinstall his programs, files, etc?
    Here's how I did it:
    Remember there's no Firewire on the Rev. D so there's no way to connect a bootable external hard disk to it. I do have an iPod which has both Firewire and USB cables though. So I connected my 6 GB iPod Mini to the Rev D iMac's USB port, checked "manually manage music" and "enable disk use". Deleted all music files.
    Ran Carbon Copy Cloner and cloned the iMac's disk to the iPod (this took a couple of hours over USB). Set the Rev. D aside.
    Opened the DV SE and removed its 120 GB HD. Information from this web site was most useful. Installed its original 30 GB. Booted it from my Panther disk and partitioned the HD to contain one 7.9 GB partition and the balance in another. Installed Panther on both partitions. Booted the DV SE to ensure the Panther installation went OK. No problems.
    Just for kicks, I set the startup disk to the iPod over Firewire and booted the DV SE from it. Lo and behold it works! there was the old iMac Rev D's old self displayed on my DV SE. Who would think you could use an iPod as a boot disk? Everything worked like it did on Dad's old machine. Weird!
    Selected the startup disk to the larger partition of the 30 GB internal HD and booted it. Ran Carbon Copy Cloner to clone the iPod to the smaller partition. This went a little faster since it's now over Firewire. Selected the startup disk back to the smaller partition of the 30 GB HD.
    Removed the 30 GB HD and reinstalled the 120 GB in the DV SE. Made sure the the DV SE still works then set it aside.
    Opened the iMac Rev. D and removed its pathetically diminutive 6 GB HD. Installed the 30 GB. Closed it up and it attempted to boot. It wouldn't work and got hung on a blue screen. Hmm.
    I booted from a Panther disk. I went to reset the user password, but quickly determined there were no users installed on the boot partition. None. Obviously this would present a problem. Apparently it wasn't a good idea to install Panther on the larger partition using an identical user name and password - I think this confused Panther which deleted the account from the boot partition. If I had to do it over again, I would have set up a temporary account so I could boot from the larger partition and use CCC to restore the smaller partition. Anyway, no immediate solution came to mind, so I did an archive and install, preserving user settings and all that.
    Oddly enough the only "user" was the system administrator. Fortunately, the system administrator had all the same user settings and files that my Dad had so I simply renamed the home folder, set the login name and password accordingly, and that was that.
    For some reason Safari didn't work. Safari would launch, but no window displayed and clicking on the menus did nothing. I could only select "quit" from the Dock. I checked my permissions, trashed the prefs file, everything I could think of, but nothing helped. In desperation I downloaded and installed Safari from Apple's web site (using Firefox which was already installed and fortunately still worked). Amazingly, the same thing happened again. No menus would work. Finally, about to give up, I extracted an older version of Safari from the Panther install disks using Pacifist. That worked! I have no idea what caused this bizarre problem.
    Now, back to the reason I started this to begin with. The boot partition is limited to 8 GB which is better than the 6 GB it used to be, but there is only a little more than 2 GB free now. There is another 20 GB on the remaining partition, but how to use it? As I understand it, you can use Netinfo Manager to map the user's "home" directory to another volume. I haven't tried that yet, but when the boot partition nears capacity, I'll give that a shot. I'm not looking forward to the permissions nightmare that may result.
    So, success for now. The machine runs like new, sure it's a little slow but he's not running Photoshop or anything. That fan makes a racket – how spoiled we've become.
    There was probably an easier way to do all this, but hey, it worked.
    By the way my DV SE runs OS X 10.4.9 flawlessly with a new 120 GB HD and 384 MB memory. I have no plans to retire it any time soon.
    PB Ti 1 GHz  PB 17 1.33 GHz  iMac DV SE  iMac D  iPod mini    Mac OS X (10.4.9)    Legacy (Appletalk) networked printers  22 years Apple!

    Thank you Robert; that's helpful.
    The way to map a user's entire Home folder to another volume is simple: In Netinfo Manager, select the desired user, then change his "home" property to the path where you want the new home folder to be. Theoretically this could be any volume anywhere. You can then completely delete the original home folder.
    I tried this with a test account and it seems to work ok, I just had one problem with a haxie (cleardock). It won't load its system preference. Don't know if it's related to moving the home folder or not. In any event, I'd do lots of testing before making this change permanent.

Maybe you are looking for