Is Migration Assistant best for copying contents of old hard drive, or better to do it manually?
I have removed the hard drive from my broken old Mac running 10.6.8, and I want to copy all its data/files/contents to a new Mac running 10.11.6.
I have by now successfully removed the drive, and successfully connected it using a SATA/USB adapter to my new Mac, so I can see the drive and everything on it.
The "obvious" thing to do is just copy everything I want from the old drive onto the new drive manually, by simply dragging the files over.
But I've read elsewhere that it is recommended to use "Migration Assistant," which I have on my newer 10.11.6 machine, to copy everything over automatically.
Which technique is best?
(And no, there is no iCloud backup.)
Keep in mind that basically NONE of the applications from the old 10.6.8 drive would even work in 10.11.6, so I'm not really concerned about copying those over -- instead, I'll just be copying user-created files (i.e. text, graphics, sound etc. files that I created, but not necessarily the applications I used to create them). As a simple example, I would want to copy a ".txt" text file, but I don't need to copy the old TextEdit application itself, since there will already be a newer version of TextEdit on the new machine. Etc.
One thing I am concerned about is being able to copy the email mailboxes, so that I can bring all my old archived emails with me. Will Migration Assistant successfully copy those over? And/or would I be able to copy them myself manually? If so, where/how can I view/access the mailbox files containing all the old emails? Thank you.
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