With macOS, you can set up your Mac with separate user accounts. That way, multiple people can use one computer, but the files, app settings, and other data for each user are kept separate from each other.

Backblaze specifically omits any volume that’s marked as a Time Machine backup, while Carbonite discourages it and Code42 explains the drawback. IDrive is rather neutral on the matter. Backblaze How to backup. Set up a new account and download the software from Backblaze. Follow the installation instructions. Backblaze will immediately begin to back up your hard drive. The initial backup can take days or weeks depending on the upload speed of your Internet connection. If you use a Mac you can buy an external hard drive and use Time Machine, which will run every hour and check for changes. It will save hourly backups for the previous 24 hours, daily backups for the previous month, and weekly backups for previous months. Time Machine is easy to use, both for backing up and restoring files, but it does have. Mac Only: If Migration Assistant or a Time Machine backup was used to transfer the data from the old computer to the new, the Backblaze software will need to be uninstalled and reinstalled before proceeding.

I’m trying to back up an external HDD with Backblaze on my MacBook Pro but I can’t select it because it shows up as a Time Machine drive even though I “removed” the drive from Time Machine. Is there anything else I can do to de-designate it a TM drive / make it selectable? I’ve already restarted the computer.

But what if you have two Macs, and you want to move a user account from one Mac to another? Macworld reader and newlywed Nolan wrote in with questions about just such an activity. He and his wife want to migrate his account from a computer he owns to her Mac, and he’ll sell his old computer.

But he has questions about how to handle this appropriately. Specifically:

  • Each of them have separate Time Machine backups.
  • He has Backblaze running for cloud-based archiving on his computer.
  • His wife’s Macbook doesn’t have enough storage to let him use his Photos library in place, so he wants to move this to an external drive.

What to do? Since they’re already making Time Machine backups (good data hygiene, Nolan!), it’s the right place to start. But the large Photos library could complicate matters.

My suggested order of tasks would be:

Backblaze Time Machine Backup

Time
  1. Copy the Photos library (and any photos or videos not imported that you want to store with it) to an external volume, as well as any files you need to reduce the size of your user account to migrate it successfully to the other computer.
  2. Perform a manual Time Machine backup of that old computer (Time Machine menu > Backup Now).
  3. Now, with two copies in place, delete that media from your original account. (OK, you might want to make a third copy. I won’t stop you.)
  4. Force a Time Machine backup again.
  5. Unmount the Time Machine volume from one Mac, and mount it on the other Mac.
  6. Launch Migration Assistant (Applications > Utilities).
  7. Follow the steps until you reach the Select Information to Transfer screen. Uncheck all the boxes but the one for your user account to import.
  8. Click Continue and wait for it to complete.

Your account and associated files from your old machine are now ready on the new one. You may have to copy applications manually or reinstall them, however. And you can have issues of apps were purchased across multiple Apple ID accounts, too.

Backblaze

As for Backblaze, the software offers an option called Inherit Backup State, which retains your old backed-up files at its servers, and doesn’t upload again files it’s already got fresh copies of. This would include your account’s files, of course. Make sure you have your external drive with photos and other media attached so you can add that to the backup set, too.

You can follow Backblaze’s instructions on inheriting a backup, but contact the company for more handholding if the instructions don’t precisely match the outcome you’d like. The mode is really for migrating from one computer to another, but I think the process is close to what Nolan would like here. (Nolan confirmed via email that he was able to make a backup inheritance work.)

Backblaze Backup Services

Meanwhile, retain the Time Machine backup of the old Mac for as long as you can as an added backup while new archives are formed in Time Machine and Backblaze.

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