EDIT: I see what you did there.CE MB🙂D)
Yes, you do indeed download SuperDuper! to your internal hard drive. To clone, you'll need an administrator account (chances are your personal account already has administrator rights). You must do nothing else while the cloning is in progress.
The PowerMax kit looks good. It's a Seagate Momentus 7200.4 drive, plus enclosure, plus a SuperDuper! trial version. The trial version does everything the registered version does, except smart updates if you decide to use the application for your backup routine (which you should, by the way). The smart update feature makes sure only the files that are altered since the last backup are copied. That means that the trial version will erase the external drive and copy everything over each time you backup your hard drive. As registering only costs $27,95, I absolutely recommend you buy it if you plan on using it as your backup solution.
On many websites, the Seagate drive alone will cost you about $150. The OWC enclosure I showed you is $28, meaning that for only $1 you get the convenience of having everything you need all in one package. I think that's definitely worth it. Note that OWC offers another very nice enclosure for just under $20. That, plus $150 for the Seagate drive, costs you $170. As the SuperDuper! trial version doesn't cost anything to download, that's $9 less than the PowerMax kit. See for yourself if that's worth it for you.
Formatting your new drive requires putting it in the enclosure, connecting it to your MacBook and opening Disk Utility (it's in your Utilities folder, inside the Applications folder). There, you select the new drive, click the 'Erase' tab and choose 'Mac OS Extended (Journaled)' and give the drive a name. You won't need to install Mac OS 9 drivers. After you've set everything, you click the 'Erase...' button and wait.
I'm going to upgrade my CE MB🙂D) to 4GB RAM and a 500GB hard drive... How should I transfer my files and everything? Would I need to buy Leopard for the new hard drive? I wouldn't know how to get EVERYTHING onto my new 500GB.
Please help...
Time Machine will not, I repeat, not make your drive bootable, though. You really want to use an application that makes the new drive bootable. If you use Time Machine, you'll have to install Leopard again on your new drive and then, when that's finished, use Time Machine to copy the necessary files over. With an application like SuperDuper! you do nothing but wait, swap drives and be ready to go. Couldn't be easier, really.Time machine transfers everything, even settings and applications!
Okay, what you need is either the kit from PowerMax you linked to yourself or the kit that OWC offers. You probably can't go wrong with either, but do know that there's much love for OWC on these fora, probably for a reason. If you go for the PowerMax kit, you will just need to install SuperDuper! from the cd you get with it. If you go for the OWC kit, you'll need to download it. There's nothing else you'll need. Everything else needed (cables) comes with the kits. That's what kits are for.So what should I buy? This enclosure is necessary to get everything on my new HDD? If you could tell me everything I need to buy I'll save it all and buy it after I buy my RAM...
Now, I'm just worried about messing up or not being able to do it. 🙁
Time Capsule is nice, I guess, but I'm not the person to comment on it, as I've never used one or even see one in action.As for backing up my MB and other computers, I'll be getting a Time Capsule as soon as I move so will that be all I need?
Okay, what you need is either the kit from PowerMax you linked to yourself or the kit that OWC offers. You probably can't go wrong with either, but do know that there's much love for OWC on these fora, probably for a reason. If you go for the PowerMax kit, you will just need to install SuperDuper! from the cd you get with it. If you go for the OWC kit, you'll need to download it. There's nothing else you'll need. Everything else needed (cables) comes with the kits. That's what kits are for.
Let me make a step-by-step list, just to be sure.
1 - put the 500GB drive in the enclosure
2 - hook up the enclosure with the drive to your MacBook
3 - open Disk Utility and format the 500GB drive as Mac OS Extended (Journaled)
4 - (download and) install SuperDuper! or Carbon Copy Cloner
5 - use either application to clone your internal drive's contents to the 500GB drive
6 - make sure the 500GB drive is bootable (try it out by restarting from it)
7 - if that works, swap the internal and external drives (put the internal drive in the enclosure)
8 - your MacBook should be as it was before, but will have a bigger hard drive
9 - the enclosure with your 'old' drive will come in handy for you never know when
Yeah, no sweat. Replacing RAM is really easy. Then again, replacing the hard drive is even easier.Thanks so much! Wow huge help. Thanks a ton... With RAM I can just switch it out right?
Time Machine will not, I repeat, not make your drive bootable, though. You really want to use an application that makes the new drive bootable. If you use Time Machine, you'll have to install Leopard again on your new drive and then, when that's finished, use Time Machine to copy the necessary files over. With an application like SuperDuper! you do nothing but wait, swap drives and be ready to go. Couldn't be easier, really.
Ah, okay. That explains. Then again, I believe using either SuperDuper! or Carbon Copy Cloner is still the easier and more convenient way to do it.Yeah, but if I understand the OP correctly, he will be able to do this without a hitch (assuming he still has his OSX reinstall disk) since he's only swtiching HD's.
I just did this with my new MBP, and it only took about 30 minutes for 40 GB of data
All what the OP needs to do is create a time machine backup on an external HD. Swap HD's, put in the OSX install disk, and when prompted, plug in the external and Time machine will take of the rest.
Yeah, but if I understand the OP correctly, he will be able to do this without a hitch (assuming he still has his OSX reinstall disk) since he's only swtiching HD's.
I just did this with my new MBP, and it only took about 30 minutes for 40 GB of data
All what the OP needs to do is create a time machine backup on an external HD. Swap HD's, put in the OSX install disk, and when prompted, plug in the external and Time machine will take of the rest.