Rocketship01 wrote:
Okay so, another stupid question, do those put the copies offline?
None of the suggestions here regarding Migration Assistant, CCC, or SuperDuper delete any files at the source location. They may delete files at the destination depending on your choices made with each app.
I seriously do not get why Apple has to make this more complicated. Why make all these hoops, why not just have it be like plugging a flash drive in and being able to copy it over? (ditto with the steps for target disk mode).
You need to understand how each tool or utility works in order to understand its purpose & behavior. @Barney-15E has summarized Migration Assistant/Setup Assistant quite well.
Transfer to a new Mac with Migration Assistant - Apple Support
FYI, when you first powered on your brand new Mac, you were greeted with Setup Assistant which helps users to configure their new Mac. Setup Assistant gives you the option to migrate from your old computer (Mac or Windows), or from a Time Machine backup.
I don't know, maybe I should just use a Seagate drive and copy it all over that way.
That is always an option, but things do get complicated for certain things such as various libraries and apps which have lots of stuff scattered across the home user folder. For items within your Desktop, Documents, Downloads, then they are usually just stuff you placed there manually so it makes the manual copy process simple.
Edit, also I'm not sure fi this is relevant but was Googling around and found this article saying that transferring from Intel to Apple Silicon is not recommended as many files are not optimized. I'm including it here since I'm not sure if it is accurate or not. https://www.makeuseof.com/migration-assistant-upgrading-to-apple-silicon-mac/
That article is non-sense as @Barney-15E intuited since it only talked about people's documents.
If they had instead mentioned applications, then yes, migrating older Intel applications to an M-series Mac can sometimes be a problem especially if you are upgrading from a very old system. If the applications on your old Mac are Universal apps, then there is no issue because a Universal app is made to run on both Intel & M-series CPUs/systems. An Intel only app, even if recent, requires Rosetta 2 to run in order to translate the Intel CPU instructions into something the M-series Mac's CPU can understand. The downside is a newer version of the app may be a Universal one or now it may have an M-series specific build of the app (the latter is preferred since it takes up less space).
When migrating from one platform to another such as from an Intel Mac to an M-series Mac, many people decide it is a great time to "clean" their system by only migrating their data in order to get rid of a decade of clutter within the system. This involves downloading & installing the most recent versions of the apps needed and setting them up fresh by configuring their settings (and the macOS settings). Many others just perform a full direct migration from Intel to M-series. It is all up to the user....a lot of it depends on your individual system and how you've managed it previously.