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Seeking Mac Mini advice/suggestions

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  • rche
    channeling Bob Wills
    • Mar 26, 2008
    • 7391

    #46
    Time Machine is an auto backup application in the Mac OS. You can use it to back up (copy) your system to the new drive. It is also a great tool to automatically back up system and important files to a dedicated backup storage device when the computer is not in use. Time Machine was introduced in OS 10.5, so you should have that available with the OS you are using.

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    • Hector
      el Hombre de Acero
      • May 19, 2003
      • 31852

      #47
      Thank you so much!
      sigpic

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      • Hector
        el Hombre de Acero
        • May 19, 2003
        • 31852

        #48
        What's this for?

        The Accelsior S dual-lane PCIe 2.0 card delivers flexible storage expansion to your silver Mac Pro tower or PC with more than 500 MB/s of throughput.
        sigpic

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        • Hector
          el Hombre de Acero
          • May 19, 2003
          • 31852

          #49
          Here's a like new SSD on Amazon...$40 cheaper...

          sigpic

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          • megoapesnut
            The name says it all!
            • Dec 3, 2007
            • 3727

            #50
            Originally posted by Hector
            That might work. You would then plug into a PCI slot rather that a drive bay.That will save you a bay and no need to buy an adapter.
            Last edited by megoapesnut; Aug 4, '15, 8:58 AM.

            Comment

            • megoapesnut
              The name says it all!
              • Dec 3, 2007
              • 3727

              #51
              Originally posted by Hector
              Here's a like new SSD on Amazon...$40 cheaper...

              http://www.amazon.com/gp/offer-listi...&condition=all
              That would be fine for you

              Comment

              • megoapesnut
                The name says it all!
                • Dec 3, 2007
                • 3727

                #52
                Yes, Time Machine is an App installed on your computer. You can access it via your system prefs panel. Actually, anytime you plug a new hard drive into your computer it should pop up and ask if you want to use it with Time Machine. Just plug in a portable or internal drive and run Time Machine to do a full back up. Then, after you do a clean install of the Mac OS onto the SSD, when you boot and have to windows where you need to setup the computer, one of the options will show "restore from Time Machine backup". Choose that option and follow the instructions.

                Comment

                • megoapesnut
                  The name says it all!
                  • Dec 3, 2007
                  • 3727

                  #53
                  Originally posted by Hector
                  It's sold on Amazon too and getting good reviews. Scroll down and read the review from the guy who got the speed boost. Sounds like just what you are looking for.

                  http://www.amazon.com/OWC-Accelsior-...ds=accelsior+s

                  Comment

                  • Brazoo
                    Permanent Member
                    • Feb 14, 2009
                    • 4767

                    #54
                    Originally posted by Hector
                    One fact I did learn about my old 2007 Mac Pro...Lion is indeed the highest operation system I can go...but it's cool...as long as I can use my illustrator and Photoshop in peace, ha...
                    My friend just confirmed that as well!

                    He did tell me there might be a way to hack it though:
                    Hi, Low End Mac readers. My name is Robert Bryant, and I am a computer tech in Central California just south of San Jose. As a daily Mac Pro user, I wanted to provide the Low End Mac community with the necessary steps to take a base model 2006 Mac Pro 1,1 or 2007 2,1 […]

                    Comment

                    • Hector
                      el Hombre de Acero
                      • May 19, 2003
                      • 31852

                      #55
                      Originally posted by megoapesnut
                      That might work. You would then plug into a PCI slot rather that a drive bay.That will save you a bay and no need to buy an adapter.
                      Shouldn't this combo work too?





                      Cheaper too...
                      Last edited by Hector; Aug 4, '15, 3:05 PM.
                      sigpic

                      Comment

                      • Hector
                        el Hombre de Acero
                        • May 19, 2003
                        • 31852

                        #56
                        Originally posted by megoapesnut
                        Yes, Time Machine is an App installed on your computer. You can access it via your system prefs panel. Actually, anytime you plug a new hard drive into your computer it should pop up and ask if you want to use it with Time Machine. Just plug in a portable or internal drive and run Time Machine to do a full back up. Then, after you do a clean install of the Mac OS onto the SSD, when you boot and have to windows where you need to setup the computer, one of the options will show "restore from Time Machine backup". Choose that option and follow the instructions.
                        Will do...THANKS!!!
                        sigpic

                        Comment

                        • Hector
                          el Hombre de Acero
                          • May 19, 2003
                          • 31852

                          #57
                          Originally posted by Brazoo
                          My friend just confirmed that as well!

                          He did tell me there might be a way to hack it though:
                          http://lowendmac.com/2014/modernizin...pro-11-and-21/
                          Looks intimidating...but I'll read the whole thing...thanks.
                          sigpic

                          Comment

                          • Hector
                            el Hombre de Acero
                            • May 19, 2003
                            • 31852

                            #58
                            Originally posted by megoapesnut
                            It's sold on Amazon too and getting good reviews. Scroll down and read the review from the guy who got the speed boost. Sounds like just what you are looking for.

                            http://www.amazon.com/OWC-Accelsior-...ds=accelsior+s
                            You know, it's more expensive than an adapter for the HD bay...but the SSD on the PCI slot seems to be much faster than placing the SSD in the HD bay...so it's worth going this route after all...

                            Apple's new Mac Pro has some Mac users buzzing: the tiny machine appears to be crazy fast, and it's a total redesign of the system - replacing the giant aluminum box of yore with a tiny little black c


                            Super thanks, yeah!

                            I guess that Crucial SSD will work fine with the OWC PCI mount...
                            sigpic

                            Comment

                            • Hector
                              el Hombre de Acero
                              • May 19, 2003
                              • 31852

                              #59
                              Okay, it's getting confusing now.

                              From the PCI slot vs SATA bay site..

                              Apple's new Mac Pro has some Mac users buzzing: the tiny machine appears to be crazy fast, and it's a total redesign of the system - replacing the giant aluminum box of yore with a tiny little black c


                              "There are a few caveats, depending on the age of your Mac Pro. Early Mac Pros (models built in 2006 and 2007) sport PCIe 1.0 slots that don't perform as fast as later models, so you will be bandwidth-limited on those machines. 2008 models and beyond, like my eight-core Mac Pro, have faster PCIe 2.0 slots. The 2008 model has two 16x slots, and one is occupied by the stock video card. If you're only using one video card, you can use the other for the SSD and see maximum throughput. In any of the other 4x slots you're going to see slower performance. 2009 and newer Mac Pros will see the best performance out of any available slot."


                              From the questions and answers section:

                              claustin
                              "My brother has a first gen Mac Pro from 2007. Mac Pro 1,1 I believe. Would there be any gain in a PCIe SSD running on the PCIe 1.0 slot as opposed to a SATA SSD? Also, is it possible to roll a fusion drive utilizing a PCIe SSD (I've done it on my 2011 mini, so I'm not worried about the process)? I'm just looking to help him milk it as long as he can."

                              REPLY

                              Peter Cohen
                              "In short, no. He's better off with a SATA SSD."

                              So since I have the first generation aluminum tower Mac Pro 1.1 2007...I guess my best option is to pass on the PCI adapter...and just go with an SSD card mounted on an adapter into a HD bay. Get the Crucial over the OWC as well...great reviews and cheaper priced.

                              Agree or disagree?
                              sigpic

                              Comment

                              • megoapesnut
                                The name says it all!
                                • Dec 3, 2007
                                • 3727

                                #60
                                Originally posted by Hector
                                Okay, it's getting confusing now.

                                From the PCI slot vs SATA bay site..

                                Apple's new Mac Pro has some Mac users buzzing: the tiny machine appears to be crazy fast, and it's a total redesign of the system - replacing the giant aluminum box of yore with a tiny little black c


                                "There are a few caveats, depending on the age of your Mac Pro. Early Mac Pros (models built in 2006 and 2007) sport PCIe 1.0 slots that don't perform as fast as later models, so you will be bandwidth-limited on those machines. 2008 models and beyond, like my eight-core Mac Pro, have faster PCIe 2.0 slots. The 2008 model has two 16x slots, and one is occupied by the stock video card. If you're only using one video card, you can use the other for the SSD and see maximum throughput. In any of the other 4x slots you're going to see slower performance. 2009 and newer Mac Pros will see the best performance out of any available slot."


                                From the questions and answers section:

                                claustin
                                "My brother has a first gen Mac Pro from 2007. Mac Pro 1,1 I believe. Would there be any gain in a PCIe SSD running on the PCIe 1.0 slot as opposed to a SATA SSD? Also, is it possible to roll a fusion drive utilizing a PCIe SSD (I've done it on my 2011 mini, so I'm not worried about the process)? I'm just looking to help him milk it as long as he can."

                                REPLY

                                Peter Cohen
                                "In short, no. He's better off with a SATA SSD."

                                So since I have the first generation aluminum tower Mac Pro 1.1 2007...I guess my best option is to pass on the PCI adapter...and just go with an SSD card mounted on an adapter into a HD bay. Get the Crucial over the OWC as well...great reviews and cheaper priced.

                                Agree or disagree?

                                Unfortunately, I agree. The older Pros do have slower slots and you wouldn't see much of a difference. Not enough to be worth the extra cost.

                                Comment

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