BAZZERUK wrote:
sorry, but what does that mean - don’t they all link up to monitors?
Yes, all of them link up to monitors – but some Mac notebooks can drive more monitors than others. One type of post we see a lot around here is from someone who wanted to drive dual monitors from their notebook, and who bought a MacBook Air without realizing that the machine only supported one monitor.
I thought I'd mention the one-monitor limit in case it mattered to you.
I back up my MacBook Pro to an external hard drive - how do I transfer that to my new air and will it upload both profiles I have on there? Thanks
Physical connection
If your hard drive connects to your current MBP using a USB-A plug, you'll need to adapt to USB-C. There are many ways of doing this. E.g.,
- Apple USB-C to USB Adapter
- Small inline plug adapters (watch out for ones that only operate at USB 2 speeds)
- USB-A hubs that plug into a computer using a USB-C cable
- USB-C to Micro USB 3.0 cables (that can replace the cable that came with a portable hard drive)
- USB-C and Thunderbolt hubs and docks that have USB-A ports (among other things)
Amazon carries a lot of low-end adapters. Other World Computing is a good place to look if you're interested in Thunderbolt docks. They also carry a couple of USB-C "travel docks" that you can carry in a compartment of a laptop bag.
https://eshop.macsales.com/shop/thunderbolt/thunderbolt-docks
https://eshop.macsales.com/shop/owc-usb-c-travel-dock-e
https://eshop.macsales.com/shop/owc-usb-c-travel-dock
Migrating
If your external hard drive contains
- A current Time Machine backup of your old MacBook Pro, or
- A bootable clone backup of your old MacBook Pro (e.g., one made with Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper!)
you can tell Migration Assistant (on the new machine) to migrate from it.
Don't migrate over Wi-Fi. Migration Assistant may offer you that option, but the migration may take forever, and I've seen others on this board say it's always best to avoid Wi-Fi migration when you can.
Note: If your old system has more data than your new system's internal drive will hold, then you may not be able to let Migration Assistant do everything automatically. It sounds like that won't be an issue for you.