Back To My Mac Replacement
mo010
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2007
- Messages
- 22
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 3
- Location
- Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
- Your Mac's Specs
- MacBook white, 2.0 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo, 1GB memory and 80GB hard drive, iPhone 8GB
Back-In-Time offers an easy access to all data that was backed up by Time Machine. With Back-In-Time, you can discover any available data in the backup, and easily copy files and folder to any location of your choice. Features: Access Time Machine Data located in any disk or Mac. It's easy to panic if you get locked out of your Mac, but you can reset it and get back in fairly easy thanks to Apple's built-in tool. Jason Cipriani Sept. 28, 2020 6:15 a.m.
- Back-In-Time cracked for mac (Back-In-Time) allows you to access the contents of Time Machine backups. Its browser allows you to simultaneously view data saved in multiple Time Machine disks, data from multiple different Macs, data from multiple disks, etc. Rack-In-Time provides a fast and comprehensive view of all backups to Quickly find out which files have been backed up, how many.
- Time Machine is a great basic backup tool, but the options for locating and restoring data are quite limited. Back-In-Time gives you total flexibility in locating and recovering your data to any location on your Mac. Back-In-Time 5 (compared to version 4) Add APFS compatibility. Add snapshots when Local Time Machine backups are analyzed.
- Back-In-Time shows all your backed-up items in the left pane. Select an item to see all the backup versions in the right pane. To see all the backups of a file or folder on your Mac, simply drag it from the Finder and drop it in the Back-In-Time item list. Choose the version you want with the date slider, and restore it with a single click.
Back In Time For Macbook
Back In Time For Mac
Time Machine is one of the most advertised features of Leopard, I really like it, but honestly, I didn't use at all last month, but I'm not complaining about that. I'm sure that there are some people out there that are really taking advantage of it.
(This segment is not that much related to the actual problem)
Here's the thing: I was watching a podcast the other day about Time Machine, and the guy suggested excluding the virtual machine folder if you have one, and I happen to have one, so I went to the Time Machine preferences and did that.
I started thinking that really should take advantage of Time Machine, so I decided to try it out. I went to the downloads folder, and clicked The TM button. It did the whole transition thing (I mean going from desktop to TM mode). Then I tried clicking the arrows... nothing was happening, I tried going back in time by clicking the date manually... nothing. It was acting like there wasn't any backup folders or something, even though I have at least three weeks worth of backups on my External HD.
I tried different folders, restarting, ejecting and mounting the HD, permissions... Nothing. Here's how the TM mode looks like when I try to restore (notice the timeline):
And this one to show you past backups on the HD:
P.S. I have a LaCie 500GB USB HD.
(This segment is not that much related to the actual problem)
Here's the thing: I was watching a podcast the other day about Time Machine, and the guy suggested excluding the virtual machine folder if you have one, and I happen to have one, so I went to the Time Machine preferences and did that.
I started thinking that really should take advantage of Time Machine, so I decided to try it out. I went to the downloads folder, and clicked The TM button. It did the whole transition thing (I mean going from desktop to TM mode). Then I tried clicking the arrows... nothing was happening, I tried going back in time by clicking the date manually... nothing. It was acting like there wasn't any backup folders or something, even though I have at least three weeks worth of backups on my External HD.
I tried different folders, restarting, ejecting and mounting the HD, permissions... Nothing. Here's how the TM mode looks like when I try to restore (notice the timeline):
And this one to show you past backups on the HD:
P.S. I have a LaCie 500GB USB HD.