trueX5er
It's not backup software. It repairs your hard drive and give you the opportunity to recover lost files. Heavy duty is when you have to send a hard drive outside to get someone else to recover the files on your drive.
As far as file transfers go when you get a new computer there's an option that allows to link your old computer with the new one and it will download the files from your old computer.( Apple may help in this case as a courtesy) But you must remember that downloading files from the old computer can be risky if your hard drive has not been repaired and the files you transfer are currupt. Thats why you use software that repairs your drive before proceeding.
Anyway i wish you the best.
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by trueX5er
Ok, I know it's not a business software, but what I meant to say it's a bit heavy duty for me, and I'd rather try to back it up myself, even if that means a fried HD. I have known about the backwards compatibility for a long time, and I do have it, but I don't know how it works. Do I just plug it into the new 'puter, but like Rabbit said, I think that it will ask me to start over.
Anyways, I just booted up the computer, and at the login screen it asked me to type in my name/password. None of the things I tried worked, they must have reset it. So I called, tech is on break, I will get a call when he gets back. I have a flash drive and several DVDs, so I can try to get info onto them. How would I go about doing that? Drag the Hard Drive Icon onto the DVD?
Thanks,
True
|
__________________
"What you hear in a great jazz band is the sound of democracy. “The jazz band works best when participation is shaped by intelligent communication.”
Harmony happens whenever different parts get to form a whole by means of congruity, concord, symetry, consistency, conformity, correspondence, agreement, accord, unity, consonance…….
|