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Apr 14, 2020 Plug the drive into the malfunctioning Mac and boot up while pressing (shift-option-command-R) this will update the recovery mode and internal files of the Mac from the external drive you plugged. Open Terminal, and type ln -s with the trailing space but without pressing Enter or Return Drag the folder from the new location into the Terminal window. Drag the old location (the folder where. Thor's OS Xodus: Securely Migrating from Microsoft Windows to Mac OS X provides readers with everything they need to securely and successfully migrate from Microsoft to Mac. It includes information that can be found nowhere else, enabling users to execute a MSFT to OS X migration seamlessly and with minimal downtime. He needs to access Windows systems but prefers to work on Mac OS X, though he’s unsure about OS X’s ability to support the developer tools he needs to use. Who computes nowhere else but at.

If you’ve installed macOS Mojave to take it for a test drive and decided you don’t like it, or it doesn’t work with some of your apps, and you want to downgrade from Mojave to High Sierra, the good news is that it’s possible. The bad news, though, is that it’s quite a long process with lots of different steps. We recommend that you read the guide below carefully before you start.

If you still have an earlier version of OS X on your compatible Mac, you will need to download Yosemite on another compatible Mac with 10.6.8 or later, create a bootable Yosemite flash drive or external hard drive (using Apple’s official instructions or the third-party tool DiskMaker X), and do a clean install overwriting the hard drive on.

Do you really need to downgrade?

If you’ve decided to downgrade because Mojave is running slowly, you could try improving its performance first, by getting rid of unwanted files. CleanMyMac X scans for junk files, such as those created by iTunes, the Photos app, and the Mac’s own system software. You can then preview what it’s found and recommends you delete and decide for yourself what you want to get rid of, or you can just press a button and have it delete everything it’s found. You might find that just by deleting these file, performance improves considerably. Moreover, the app has a special Optimization and Maintenance tools designed to improve your Mac's speed. You can get started with CleanMyMac very quickly by downloading it here (for free).

Nowhere Else But Back Mac Os High Sierra

How to downgrade from macOS Mojave to macOS High Sierra

If you've decided that you still want to go back to High Sierra, follow the steps below. And please note that the process of downgrading is quite complicated and time-consuming, so try to be patient.

Step 1: Back up your Mac

You should back up your Mac before you start any major process, and hopefully you backed up before installing Mojave. If you’re unsure how to back up your Mac, you can follow the steps in this article. However, any files you’ve used or been working on since you installed Mojave won’t be up to date on that back up, so you need to copy those to an external disk or a cloud storage service like iCloud Drive or Dropbox. Don’t do anything else until you’ve copied those files.

Step 2: Make notes

The process of downgrading wipes everything from your hard drive, including passwords, license keys and settings. If you have a backup of your Mac from before you upgraded to Mojave, you should be able to migrate much of that data back to your Mac once you’ve reinstalled High Sierra. However, it’s a good idea to make sure you have a note of all the passwords, settings, licence keys and other data you’re likely to need. If you use a password manager that syncs with other devices, you could use that to store all the data you need. Otherwise, any cloud-based note-taking tool that encrypts notes will do.

It’s also a good idea to make screenshots of settings, to make it easier to set them back up later on. You should store these on an external disk, or cloud storage space.

Step 3: Erase Mojave

Once you’ve backed up the files you’ve worked on since installing Mojave, and created the bootable installer, it’s time to erase Mojave.

  1. Make sure your Mac is connected to the internet.
  2. Click on the Apple menu and choose Restart.
  3. Hold down Command+Option+Shift+R to boot into recovery mode. Note, you can also boot into Recovery mode by pressing Command+R. However, adding Option+Shift will allow you to reinstall High Sierra, if your Mac came with it installed.
  4. Click on Disk Utility in the macOS Utilities window.
  5. Select the disk with Mojave on it.
  6. Choose Erase.
  7. Give the disk a name, choose Mac OS Extended (Journaled) or APFS as the file format.
  8. Click Erase.
  9. Quit Disk Utility.

How to downgrade from macOS Mojave if your Mac shipped with High Sierra

  1. Erase your startup disk as described above — you need to do that first because Recovery mode won’t install an older version of the OS over a newer version.
  2. From macOS Utilities, choose Reinstall macOS.
  3. Press Continue.

How to downgrade from a Time Machine backup

If you made a backup of your Mac just before installing Mojave, you’re in luck. You can use that to reinstall High Sierra. Make sure your Time Machine disk is connected to your Mac, either directly or over a network, before you start.

  1. Erase your startup disk, as described above.
  2. In the macOS Utilities window, choose Restore from Time Machine Backup.
  3. If your backup is on an external disk, select it. If it’s on a Time Capsule or network disk, select it and choose Connect to Remote Disk.
  4. Type in your name and password for the disk, if necessary.
  5. Select the date and time of the backup you want to restore to.
  6. Follow the onscreen instructions.

How to downgrade using a bootable High Sierra installer

If your Mac didn’t ship with High Sierra and you don’t have a Time Machine backup, you’ll need to create an installer disk. Apple used to make all previous versions of macOS available in the Purchased tab of the Store, but the most recent version there now is El Capitan.

If you’re downgrading before the full public release of macOS Mojave, High Sierra is still available in the App Store. You can find it on the left hand side of the main App Store window, or by search for it.

Note: If you want to downgrade Mojave after its final release and haven’t already created a bootable installer of High Sierra, you’re out of luck. You’ll have to create a bootable installer of El Capitan or use Recovery Mode to roll back to the most recent version of macOS installed on your Mac. To do that, use Command+Option+R when you boot into Recovery mode (see Erase Mojave, above) instead of Command+Option+Shift+R. For that reason, if you’re reading this before Mojave has been released, it’s worth downloading High Sierra now, just in case.

Click the Download button on the App Store page and wait for the OS to download. If the installer automatically launches when it’s downloaded, quit it.

  1. You’ll need an external hard disk or SSD, or a USB stick that’s at least 12GB to create the installer.
  2. Plug the external drive or USB stick into your Mac.
  3. In the Finder, click on the Go menu, select Utilities.
  4. Launch Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
  5. Click on the external disk in the sidebar and choose the Erase tab.
  6. Give the drive the name ‘MyVolume’ in the Erase window, set the format to Mac OS Extended (Journaled) or APFS.
  7. Click Erase.
  8. Press Done when it’s finished.
  9. Quit Disk Utility.

Go back to the Utilities folder in the Finder and this time, launch Terminal.

  1. Type the following command: sudo /Applications/Install macOS High Sierra.app/Contents/Resources/createinstallmedia --volume /Volumes/MyVolume --applicationpath /Applications/Install macOS High Sierra.app
  2. Hit the Return key.
  3. Type in an administrator account password for your Mac.
  4. Wait for the word ‘Done’ to appear in the Terminal window.

Step 4: Reinstall High Sierra

  1. Go to the Apple menu, choose Restart, and hold down the Option key.
  2. When the option to select a boot disk appears, choose the installer disk you just created.
  3. High Sierra will begin installing on your Mac.
  4. When it’s finished, your Mac will restart and Startup Assistant will appear.
  5. Go through the steps to set up your Mac.

Step 5: Restore settings

Nowhere Else But Back Mac Os X

If you made a non-Time Machine backup of your Mac before installing Mojave, you can use the backup tool to restore your Mac to the state it was in when you made the backup.

Otherwise, you’ll need to reinstall apps manually, using the notes you made earlier to enter licence codes and re-create settings. You can also copy back files that you backed up when you were running macOS Mojave.

How to keep your fresh installation clean

Nowhere Else But Back Mac Os 7

You’ll notice when you revert to a clean installation of High Sierra, that your Mac seems to be running more quickly and encountering fewer problems than it did previously. Part of the reason for that is that, as you use your Mac, it accumulates lots of temporary files, cache files and other ‘junk’ that can cause performance and compatibility problems.

It could also be because your previous installation, along with all the files and applications you had installed, was occupying more than 90% of your Mac’s startup drive. MacOS uses your startup drive to store data temporarily, as a proxy for keeping it in RAM. If you don’t have enough free storage space, you will start to see performance problems.

The solution is to regularly clear out junk files and to audit your Applications, uninstalling any you no longer use. We recommend CleanMyMac X for both tasks. CleanMyMac makes it easy to uninstall apps with a couple of clicks. And when it does so, it doesn’t just remove the application itself — which is what happens if you just drag it to the Trash — it also tracks down and removes all the application’s associated files in your user Library and gets rid of those too.

As you can see, downgrading from Mojave to High Sierra could be quite simple or it could be a long drawn out process, depending on you do it. If your Mac came with High Sierra, you’re in luck, because you can use Recovery Mode to roll back — though you’ll need to erase your startup disk first. Likewise, if you have a Time Machine backup of your High Sierra installation just before you installed Mojave. If neither of those applies, your only option is to create an installer disk from the App Store. Whichever method you use, once you’ve reinstalled High Sierra, it’s worth using CleanMyMac (get its free version here) to keep your clean installation fresh and performing as well as it can.

My partner’s coworker is in the market for a new family computer, one that he can use not only for his job as a software Q&A specialist, but also for his hobbies working with digital photos. He needs to access Windows systems but prefers to work on Mac OS X, though he’s unsure about OS X’s ability to support the developer tools he needs to use. And he wants something portable, but admits that most of his work would be done at a desk.

He sent an e-mail message to some folks in the office asking for suggestions. My partner, who is a software developer, quickly replied and told him to forget about going portable and buy an iMac already. My partner says that too many people think they need to be portable when they don’t. Case in point: her father, who computes nowhere else but at his desk, has a 17-inch HP Pavilion on a stand on the desk, and it never moves.

Sometimes a laptop does make more sense for the work you need to do. But if most of your work will be done at a desk, why pretend that you need a laptop? You can get more power from a desktop system. And need I mention the iMac’s enormous, beautiful screen? (I realize that not all people like the current iMac’s screen, but I do—a lot.) The huge screen makes working on our photos in iPhoto easy and fast.

The apple of our eye is a 2.8GHz 24-inch iMac that we bought last May. We upgraded to the 1TB hard drive, and it has 2GB of RAM. We all use the computer: I connect to my work machine through a VPN client and remotely control my desktop through Apple’s Remote Desktop; my partner does the same, but controls her Windows machine through Microsoft’s free Remote Desktop Connection for Windows XP; our kids play games and we watch TV shows or Netflix movies on our iMac. What’s more, we use Parallels to run all our Windows programs, such as Quicken. (The Windows version of Intuit’s personal finance manager has more features than the Mac version.) And we store all our pictures and mini family movies in iPhoto. (And we’re contemplating buying Adobe Photoshop Elements for processing our pictures.)

As a software developer, my partner loves the fact that Mac OS X is developer-friendly, thanks to its FreeBSD underpinnings. After more than a decade in the software industry, she’s getting her master’s degree in computer science, and she sometimes does homework on a Mac. She can load all kinds of developer tools on the Mac and never has to stop what she’s doing to click on a button or close a warning box because of some presumed security breach, as she does with Microsoft Vista. In Vista, she spends more time dodging security warnings than she does developing. She says that the higher price of a Mac is nothing compared with the time she saves by using one. OS X just lets her work.

Other OS X perks my partner loves are—believe it or not—the scheduling feature in Mac OS X’s Energy Saver preference pane. I know—it seems so silly. But to put your machine on a schedule in Windows XP, you have to go through too many steps, one of which involves finding some executable system file on your machine. Yuck. She also thinks Time Machine is the most useful feature built into an OS—no more figuring out problems with third-party backup software. Time Machine makes things easy.

My point? The iMac is a pretty cool machine. Ours has everything we need, and we’re a family made up of people who have very different computing needs and preferences. And my partner recommended an iMac to her coworker without any nudging from me. She’s a developer who does a lot of work with Windows and Linux, so she understands the awesome power of Mac OS X.