How to restore an Apple Mail draft file from a time machine backup

How do I restore a single Apple Mail draft file from a time machine backup?

Never mind. Just figured it out. I restored the single file, but after that I'm receiving dozens of old notifications of new Mail. Not sure why.

Similar Messages

  • How do I access my back up files from the time machine if my computer was stolen?

    Hi, how do I access my back up files from the time machine if my mac book pro was stolen? I have a mac book air and mac too. But not sure how I can get back all the files from the stolen computer from my time capsule

    On the Mac Book Air or other Mac that you have, use Migration Assistant to transfer files from the Time Machine backups of the Mac that was taken.
    Macintosh HD > Applications > Utilities > Migration Assistant

  • I accidentally deleted my media files from iTunes and Trash when I was trying to move the files to an external hard drive. Is there a way to restore the media files from a Time Machine backup or from iTunes Match? What are the steps to do this?

    I accidentally deleted my media files from iTunes and Trash when I was trying to move the files to an external hard drive. Is there a way to restore the media files from a Time Machine backup or from iTunes Match? What are the steps to do this?

    If you have been backing up on Timemachine.
    All you need to do is enter time machine... Then the rest is obvious.
    Find the iTunes folder and hit 'Restor'.
    If not the only way to get all your iTunes music back is to enter iTunes Store.
    On the right hand side you should see 'Purchased'.
    Click 'purchased' and there you have it.

  • I need to drag a file from my time machine backup to a usb

    I need to drag a file from my time machine backup to a usb

    You can restore it to the original location as a copy, if you have a newer version there that you want to keep. So Restoring a file from TM won't over-write a newer file.

  • Moving files from a Time Machine backup manually vs restoring from a Time Machine backup

    I have read several articles saying that contemporary Macs and OSs are built such that they clean themselves up - defragmentation, general sweeping, etc. I was told by the Genius, however, that there are many little files that are left lying around after installs, uninstalls, file making, and file deletion that will gum up the works. He recommended that I set up my computer as though it's brand new and manually transfer files over from my Time Machine backup folder on my ExtHD.
    Because I couldn't find a discussion of this specific topic online, I thought I'd bring it to the community myself. Is there an advantage to setting up the computer from scratch and manually moving the files (provided I use Migration Assistant for applications)?
    For background:  My Mac was running slowly, and after doing some research and talking to a "Genius", I thought it would be wise to reformat my HD and restore my system. Aside from sluggish performance, I was experiencing strange symptoms - like free disk space remaining the same even after deleting huge files, permissions errors, etc. I tried doing a permissions repair (a process I'd been told to do before when experiencing issues, even though I never knew what that really did), and read that I should verify my disk as well. Disk Utility told me that I had to reboot from the repair disk to perform the necessary repairs. The repair disk Disk Utility told me that my disk had some major issues and needed to be reformatted and restored.
    HOURS LATER: I am back up and running now and Disk Utility is showing the appropriate amount of free disk space.

    Let's start with some basics.
    Check under the Apple in the Menu bar About this Mac > More Info
    How much Memory do you have installed?
    What size is our hard drive and how much free space?
    You'll find the term Genius does not necessarily mean they are expert. Even on this forum, you'll find varying difference of opinions and levels of expertise.
    I have read several articles saying that contemporary Macs and OSs are built such that they clean themselves up - defragmentation, general sweeping, etc.
    This is true. Apps like MacKeeper, CleanMyMac, TuneUpMyMac, Washing Machine or anything like these apps might appear to be helpful, can do too more harm than good. As a result of the 'cleanup' it can leave your Mac non-functional Mac. The forums are full of users with computers that no longer work correctly after running these so call 'cleaners'
    https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-4171
    Your Mac runs maintenance in the background for you > Mac OS X: About background maintenance tasks
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2319
    I was told by the Genius, however, that there are many little files that are left lying around after installs, uninstalls, file making, and file deletion that will gum up the works.
    I'm going to disagree here. Get rid of the installer from downloads after installing. After removing an app, most of the little files do no harm and take up very little space. However some applications mostly crapware/cleaners will leave files that continue to run silently in the background takeing up resources.
    Don't install stuff you don't really need. There is no magic bullet to clean up your messes.

  • Recovering single file from old Time Machine Backup

    I see many questions/answers that almost address my issue, but not quite, so I'm starting a new post. If this has been answered somewhere and I missed it feel free to just refer me to the correct post!
    I recently had to do a full System Restore from a Time Machine backup. The good news is that it worked beautifully and I'm using my iMac like nothing ever happened. When Time Machine tried to run (post restore), it said I didn't have enough space on my external drive. Okay, based on other posts here I see that it won't just continue from the old TM backups and it's starting "anew"...got it.
    The old TM backups must still be on that drive because it shows 144GB USED and 100GB AVAIL of my 250GB external drive. Okay, again based on other posts I know that I could just wipe the drive clean and start fresh...BUT...
    I restored to my TM backup of 8/24....now I realize that there are one or two files that I at some point stopped having TM backup and now I want to get them back (the whole point of TM, right?)...I figured since it's "holding" that space on my external drive, the old backups are intact and I just need a way to get to them to pull them back to my restored system, then start TM from scratch.
    I can't get at the old TM backups. I've tried:
    1) Using the "Browse other Time Machine Backups..." feature. It doesn't see the old TM backup...sees the drive, but nothing on it.
    2) Browsing the drive in "Finder"...nothing shows up...just the attempted NEW backup.
    3) Connecting the external drive to an entirely different Mac and trying to browse the disk in Finder OR use the Browse other Time Machine Backups...still nothing.
    So I have a 250GB drive that shows 144GB used, but no way to even view what that is....am I out of luck? Or would something in DiskUtility or a 3rd party software (DiskWarrior) help in this situation?
    Is there any way to go pull one or two files from my old TM backup?

    Exactly Glenn....I did nothing to the hard drive after the "restore from Time Machine Backup"...
    I've never used the Migration Assistant...have to look into that.
    I didn't want to be argumentative since I was the relative newbie asking for help, but I HAVE to believe that if I didn't write over the files (i.e. reformat the drive), AND the Finder is recognizing that there are 144 GB USED, the files must be there, untouched....
    The urgency isn't there for me anymore, I've already re-created the one doc I wanted to recover and the other file was my Windows XP virtual machine file...(I didn't want to have to re-install Windows from scratch - but I did)....so maybe this is a good time to "play" with that drive while I can afford to lose everything on it!

  • Can I manually recover files from a Time Machine backup?

    I'm just about to perform a fresh install of OS X Lion.  I plan to re-install the apps I need from scratch so only need my files backed up (iTunes/Aperture library, documents folder etc).  At the moment I have time machine backing up to an external USB disk. 
    Do I need to copy my Music/Pictures/Documents folders to another USB disk before doing a fresh install of Lion or can I just copy/paste them from my time machine backup disk (would save a lot of time)?  I don't want to do a time machine recovery, recover preferences or apps etc - just manually recover my data.
    Thanks.

    JBF80 wrote:
    I want to copy all of my files, but not settings or applications.  I'm happy to copy/paste the Documents, Pictures and Music directories from the TM disk.
    Well, that is what I said ("You can customize what to transfer")

  • How do I retrieve my Mail files from a Time Machine backup?

    I reformatted my iMac hard rive because I was having all kinds of problems with speed and crashing.  I did a Time Machine backup and then reformatted the hard drive and reinstalled Yosemite.  I then reinstalled fresh apps and all my files.  I just don't know where to find my email files on the backup.  I don't even know where to find them on my current system.  In older OS X systems, they were easily located under your user name.  Where'd they go?  Please help.

    Open Finder then your user Library. You can get to your user Library from Finder/Go/Go To Folder and type ~/Library
    Next, open the Mail folder; then click on the Time Machine icon in the Menu Bar and Enter Time Machine. This should open Time Machine to your ~/Library/Mail folder that you just opened. Now, you should be able to copy your V2 folder for what ever date that should have all your mailboxes.

  • Problem restoring files from a Time Machine Backup! HELP!

    Heya,
    I have Snow Leopard and have been using Time Macine regularly since May.... I never needed to restore any file until now...
    Deleted some must have stuff.. and emtird the trash (of course!).. so went to time machine to restore it...
    Looked it up... nice interface.. have stuff since May 2011... nice.. found the 10+Gb of stuff I had deleted.. and restored... Pffffew!
    Opend the file... Bzzzz! you loose... file is currupt,,, what?
    load again.. still no go? files all look the right length m.. hmm very strance... can;t open then... lets try a simeple file...
    restore a text file... size ok.. but... EMPTY!
    use HexEdit to open the text file... All ZERO's!
    check the otehr files I restores ALL ZERO's!
    DOH! restore files I saved into safe old Time machine in May 2011... AL ZEROS!!
    ***! Everything is ZERO! my last 6 months worth of time machine backups is all gone! Directory structures say they are there.. file sizes are ok.. but NO DATA!!!
    Can somone please HELP ME!
    G./

    Open Disk Utility. Click once on the external drive left-most icon (not the indented volume name/icon); what does it indicate for Partition Map Scheme? Also, do you have an Intel Mac or a PPC Mac?
    Now click "Verify Disk" and see if it finds errors or if it reports "ok."
    What I am hoping (this is something of a long shot) is that there will be errors found on the disk that Disk Utility can repair and then your data will be properly associated with the file names and headers. "Verify" simply reports back on the state of the file system and can do no harm; only when you click on "Repair" will it actually try to repair anything. You might want to report back first on the results of "Verify" before trying to "repair."
    By the way, this Verify (or Repair) procedure can take ~ hours for a large disk that is mostly full. I did this recently on an external Time Machine drive that was 1.5 TB in size and 2/3 full and it took ~ 3 hours.
    If severe errors are found on that disk, something stronger than Apple's Disk Utility might be called for, such as Disk Warrior. Hence better to report back here before roceeding with any "repairs."
    The type of error I am hoping you might have is in the file system that relates the filenames and their header (and file sizes) to the locations around the disk where the actual data inside the file are located. If that file system gets damaged, your computer will have trouble finding the actual data that goes with each file. Hence getting zeros when you should have gotten data. Sometimes this can be fixed, sometimes it cannot. Often it can. If the problem is caused by a physical problem with the disk, the likelihood of recovery is low. If the problem is with the file system/mapping to the data on the drive, it very well might be fixable.
    Have you had any power failures, system freezes, improper or disorderly computer shutdowns, etc. or unexpected dismounting of the backup drive anytime since you have been using it? Have you ever gone into that external backup drive in the finder and changed any of the files on it yourself, or has it only been touched indirectly through Time Machine?

  • How do I remove a File from the Time Machine backup?

    How can I delete a very large folder (30 gb) that I do not need on my time machine backup? I was transferring the file from one computer to another and TM backed it up while it was on my Macbook Pro. Now I have this massive file on my external (time machine) hard drive that I do not need.

    In Finder, open the folders until you can see the folder icon for the folder you want to delete.
    Launch Time Machine. It should open a similar view of what you were looking at in Finder.
    Select the folder, and click on the "Gear" icon at the top of the window and choose "Delete All Backups of "nameofyourfolder"".

  • Restore files from last Time Machine backup after HD erase and install

    I just had to do an "erase and install" ... trying to restore files from my last Time Machine backup but after completing the Airport Utility setup / configure steps, it says "waiting to restart" for a few minutes and then says it cannot find TIme Capsule after restart (though TC never restarted). I'm pretty desperate to get my files back as it's Sunday night and my business needs to be up and running by morning. Any help would be greatly appreciated ... even if it's saying I need to take TC into a Mac store to have them retrieve my files.

    While in Time Machine, press the key combination shift-command-C. The front window will show all mounted volumes. All snapshots should now be accessible. Select the one you want and navigate to the files you want to restore.

  • How do I delete files from a Time Machine backup?

    Hi,
    I have a Time Machine backup that has a large group of image files on it. How can I delete this data from the TM backup so it is no longer taking up that space on the Time Machine backup drive? Just delete the files in Leopard and run Time Machine again...? I somehow don't think that will work...

    hassiman wrote:
    Hi,
    I have a Time Machine backup that has a large group of image files on it. How can I delete this data from the TM backup so it is no longer taking up that space on the Time Machine backup drive? Just delete the files in Leopard and run Time Machine again...? I somehow don't think that will work...
    It would be a disaster.
    Only delete TM files from the TM interface. Run TM from the dock, select the file(s) you wish to remove and click the Action Gear. You have the option to delete that particular backup, or all instances of that backup. This is the only way to delete backup files.

  • How do I remove files from my Time Machine Backup and then how to exclude external hard drives from Time Machine?

    How can I remove external hard drives from the Time Machine and exclude them in the future?

    For deleting backups from Time Machine: http://pondini.org/TM/12.html
    For excluding things from backups: http://pondini.org/TM/10.html
    For general Time Machine advice (all courtesy of Pondini): http://pondini.org/OSX/Home.html

  • How do you migrate a FileVault-protected account from a Time Machine backup?

    Recently the hard drive on my Macbook Pro died and had to be replaced. Prior to the hard drive's failure, I had backed up my sole user account to an external hard drive using Time Machine. When setting up the new hard drive for the first time, I used Migration Assistant to restore my user account to my new hard drive. However, when I go to log in to the user account I transferred over, I encounter the following error: "You are unable to log in to the FileVault user account "User" at this time. Log in failed because an error occurred." I am absolutely positive I entered the correct password.
    My next step was to boot from the install disc and repair the hard drive and permissions. The same problem occurred when I tried to login.
    Then I wiped the hard drive and installed Snow Leopard normally without attempting to migrate anything. After the installation, I attempted migration, only to see an error message under the "Users" heading, saying, "User accounts protected by FileVault can't be transferred." Looking at the backups I have on my external hard drive, I cannot see any of my individual files, which I could when logged in on my previous hard drive.
    I have scoured the internet for possible solutions but none seem to fit the situation. The techs at the Genius Bar tried a few things beyond my level of technical know-how and were unsuccessful, and they did not seem too optimistic about my chances. They mentioned that I should consider a visit to a data recovery center if I could not find any way to fix this issue.
    This is immensely important, considering my FileVault-protected account nestled away in the Time Machine backups on my external hard drive contains all of my work. While I am willing to make the trip to the data recovery center, I would like that to be a measure of last resort. Any help you can provide will be greatly appreciated!

    A google search for You are unable to log in to the FileVault user account yielded many hits, including this one: http://support.apple.com/kb/TS4184 which might help resolve your issue. I don't use TM, so that's all I have to offer.

  • How can I recover an entry in Calendar from my Time Machine backup

    How can I recover entries from Calendar using my Time Machine backup.

    Fernand,
    If you are using iCloud, follow the steps listed by Roger Wilmut in : Restoring iCloud calendars from Time Machine.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Not able to create entries for ALBTCMON (SCM 4.10)

    I am trying to create entries for monitoring jobs that start with "SAP_*" and I am trying to add entry into ALBTCMON table.  But system is trowing the message as below. =============================================================== Create data proce

  • IDoc to AS2 scenario connection issue

    Hi Experts, IDoc to AS2 scenario. i am geeting below connection  error  while sending data from PI to Third Party Partner.Please help me on this issue i will appriciate you . MP: exception caught with cause javax.resource.ResourceException: Fatal exc

  • How to create new photo albums

    i've had my iphone 4 for about a week now...and i'm new to this discussion board so i apologize if this topic has been discussed before. i have looked at everything i possibly can on my phone and in the users manual. i can't figure out how to create

  • Problems with pop-up window in IE

    We run a free multiplayer poker game on Bebo and Facebook. You can see it at http://apps.bebo.com/poker on Bebo and http://apps.facebook.com/pokersavvy on Facebook. As you'll see, when a user visits the app the Flash lobby loads inside the page. Ther

  • T42p Recovery

    Some software failure made me want to install my T42p, Type: 2373-GTG, with recovery CD-package. This CD-package contains IBM Rescue and recovery, CD 1 of 1 CD for Thinkpad R51, T42, T42p Type 1829, 1830, 1831, 1836, 1840 1841 CD 1 to 7 of 7. I don'