#migrationassistant — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #migrationassistant, aggregated by home.social.
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Google’s Migration Assistant for Android Studio now lets devs transfer iOS apps to Android faster with AI. Hours of code conversion, fewer errors. How are you planning to use it? Let’s discuss!
🚩 #GoogleDev #AndroidStudio #MigrationAssistant #AI #AppDevelopment #iOStoAndroid #DevTools #TechInnovation
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Fml, I had to migrate from an old #MacBook to a new one using thunderbolt. As per all docs, I disabled #Bluetooth and WiFi to force it to thunderbolt cable and it didn’t work no matter what I tried, and used a crappy p2p connection instead
So I gave up and let them find themselves over the faster wifi. And *now* #migrationassistant discovered the long lost #thunderbolt cable (3gbps) 🤦🏻♂️
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I think this might be the first time I’ve had the right cable at the right time!👍🥳🎉🎊
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I never realized that for several years, #Apple has offered a *#Windows* #MigrationAssistant app to transfer your information from a #PC to a #Mac, as well as their Mac-to-Mac Migration Assistant: https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204087
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This exploit could possibly give you a Migraine.
macOS exploit found by Microsoft could bypass System Integrity Protection https://9to5mac.com/2023/05/30/macos-exploit-microsoft/
#macOS #Apple #Microsoft #SIP #MigrationAssistant #Security #InfoSec #TechNews
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@engineerminded Also another problem is that many #Linux distros don't offer the types of software that users want, but some add on a lot of unwanted bloat. For example #LinuxMint is supposed to be a user-friendly distro but they install tons of additional software that you may never use. What they should do is at the time of installation, give you the option to go with the standard package of applications (for "give me all the goodies" types) OR to pick the packages you really want from a list. But then they don't offer some types of packages that people might actually want for security or privacy reasons, such as #OpenSnitch (a Linux application-specific firewall equivalent to the #MacOS #LittleSnitch program) or a good password manager such as #KeePassXC, or a good full-system backup utility similar to the #MacOS #TimeMachine program (most Linux backup utilities only back up a subset of the system, such as user files only or system files only, and none have the equivalent of the #MacOS #MigrationAssistant which lets you restore your applications, settings, and data to a new machine, or if your main storage fails and you have to replace it). The lack of an equivalent to Time Machine/Migration Assistant is one of the major reasons I have not personally gone to Linux on my desktop.