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Moving Files Between a Mac and a PC the Easy Way

Quick Scan

Email: best for few, small files like office documents.

YouSendIt: best for a zip file 10-100MB in size.

USB Flash Drives: Best for 15MB to 4GB of files.

External Hard Drives: Best for several GB on up.

CD/DVDs: Cheapest but slowest route. CDs are faster to burn, but are limited to about 600MB. DVDs go to 4.7 GB or 9GB for dual layer ones.

Mac to Mac Target Disk: Fastest but you will do two restarts in the process.

Online Storage: use for small files unless you have a super-fast connection

Moving Files Between a Mac and a PC the Easy Way

OK, you've made the switch, but you want to move some files from your old PC to your shiny new Mac. Setting up a network seems like overkill for just the few things that will make the transition. So what's the easy way? Let's take a look!

To begin with, there are several easy ways to move files between computers (and this includes Mac to Mac as well). The key variables are how many files you want to move, how big those files are, and how fast your internet connection is. In all cases, you might want to create a folder for all the files to move on your source computer. Having them together will make keeping track of them easier.

Email
If you have email access set up on both computers and a broadband connection, email is the best way to move just a few small files. Just drag them into an email and send it to yourself. I usually try to stick to around a 5MB files size per email because some email systems will kick back emails with too big of attachments. If you are using web mail like Gmail, you won't have these size restrictions.

TIP: If you have a bunch of files you want to send this way, try making a zip file of the group and sending that. It's easier than trying to track a large number of files in an email. It also stops the email program from trying to display the files in the email when possible.

Another TIP: if you have 10-100MB to move, try a service like yousendit.com. It's made for files that are just a little too big to email but still small enough to send over the internet.

SneakerNet
SneakerNet is an old term for moving files by putting them on a disk and then walking them over to the target computer. In this case, I recommend a USB flash drive. That's one of those little key-chain size flash drives. This is the least mentally challenging way to move files.

If you don't already have a flash drive, maybe it's a good time to get one. They are the floppy disks of this decade. I have a 4GB one I got from Buy.com for just a few dollars. There always seems to be specials on these things. You should be able to get 2-4 GB ones for $5-$20 these days.

Just insert it into the source computer, copy files to it, eject and then insert into the target computer. Now just move the files to their final destination.

You can also use a CD or DVD for this, but burning these, especially DVDs takes a bit longer than than using a flash drive.

Lots of Large Files
If you've got more files than a couple trips with a flash drive can hold, you should look to an external hard drive. These hold anywhere from 80GB to 1 TB (that's terabyte. 1000GB). These aren't as convenient as flash drives because they are bigger and usually need to be plugged in to operate. They also have moving parts, so you can't handle them as casually as a flash drive.

If you don't already have one, you might want to get one to use as a backup drive once you move your files. When Leopard comes around this fall, there will be a super easy backup program called Time Machine in it, but you will need a second drive to take advantage of it.

TIP: Got on iPod? You can use the unused space on it as an external hard drive by selecting that preference. If you have a full size one, there is probably many gigs available on it.

WARNING: With both flash drives and hard drives, PCs won't read them if they are formatted for the Mac. But your Mac will read them if they are formatted for the PC.

Mac to Mac
When I'm getting ready to backup a Mac in preparation for a reinstall or something like that where I need to copy most of a hard drive, I'll copy straight from one Mac to another via FireWire in Target Disk Mode. The upside is that there is only one transfer involved this way (no intermediary) which cuts your copy time in half. The downside is the time to restart one computer twice. You can gauge where the break even point is for you.

On Campus?
If you have a T1 or T3 connection to the internet, you might also try online storage such as Mozy. If you are going from Mac to Mac and you already have .mac service, don't forget your iDisk. Large files will take a while on broadband, but if you have a super-fast connection, online storage might be worth a look.

Recap
Email: best for few, small files like office documents.
YouSendIt: best for a zip file 10-100MB in size.
USB Flash Drives: Best for 15MB to 4GB of files.
External Hard Drives: Best for several GB on up.
CD/DVDs: Cheapest but slowest route. CDs are faster to burn, but are limited to about 600MB. DVDs go to 4.7 GB or 9GB for dual layer ones.
Mac to Mac Target Disk:
Fastest but you will do two restarts in the process.
Online Storage: use for small files unless you have a super-fast connection


Do you have any questions, or suggestions that you have found to be successful? Let us know in the Comments section below!


DIG DEEPER

Using your iPod as a storage drive

How to use FireWire target disk mode

Flash Drive prices on Shopzilla  

YouSendIt

How Do I Share Files Between My Mac and PC?

 
 

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Your Comments:

isi, did you change the format when you burned them? If the files are clipped short, there is nothing you can do. If you made an audio cd from protected WMAs and then import them into iTunes, you will lose all the track info. That should be the worst case. But if they were unprotected, you can move them to MP3 and keep the info. If you don't have access to them anymore, you might be hosed.


 Chris Kerins
 05/24/2008  at  09:11 AM

To read NTFS from MAC = http://code.google.com/p/macfuse/

To transfer from MAC to PC = http://hem.bredband.net/catacombae/hfsx.html


 Michel
 07/10/2008  at  05:43 PM

Thanks for the tips! This really helped me set up my new Macbook Pro!


 aisha
 04/16/2009  at  02:02 PM

On an external HDD I got all my docs, and when creating new ones on my mac under *.doc format, I'm not able to move the files saved on my mac to the HDD. I tried to drag them to the drive, but it won't pass it trough.


 Ron
 10/31/2009  at  06:49 AM

Sorry but this is BS. I've been trying for about a month now to transfer a singel 21 gig video file from my Mac Pro to my PC. Of course, the FAT 32 formated drives do not work on anything above 4 gig. But when I format an external hard drive to NTFS format and attach it to my Mac, it gives me a this drive cannot be changed error message - and I've tried everything. when I format the external drive to one of the Apple formats the PC cannot read the drive. Any ideas?


 Wayne
 02/21/2011  at  12:06 PM

how can i transfer my pictures from MAC to my USB?


 ana marie
 05/08/2011  at  08:56 PM

ana marie, Just drag them from iphoto or wherever they are on to the the icon of your usb drive on the desktop. Simple as that. If you want more specificity with more clicks, in iPhoto select the photos, go File>Export… then select exactly where you want them to go.


 Chris Kerins
 05/10/2011  at  10:27 AM

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