The last thing remaining (if you had to create a new Apple ID) is to log out of the App Store and login to your personal Apple ID. When the process is complete, press command+Q to close Disk Utility.
Change the format to Mac OS Extended (Journaled). Here you will be provided with a menu that shows the list of available drives that you can use Time Machine with.
After this you are going to want to click on Select Disk. Then, you are going to want to click the Time Machine on. Choose a new name for your Mac’s hard drive. First, make sure your external drive is hooked into your Mac and that your Mac recognizes it. Click the Erase button at the top of the window. If you don’t see it, go to View > Show All Devices.
Once you’re logged in, you should be free to update and after some more loading screens, you will have an fully up-to-date MacBook. Select your new hard drive from the sidebar. Release the keys when you see the Apple logo on your screen. This will start your Mac in recovery mode.
While the system is turning on, hold down the Command + R keys. Since you will be creating this account purely for the sake of updating the MacBook, I wouldn’t recommend using your primary email or adding any form of payment to the account. Here are the steps to do that with Time Machine: Make sure your Time Machine backup disk is connected to your computer.
If you were unable to login, there is a work around – that is to say, OS X Mavericks will let you make a new Apple ID, which luckily are free.
The reason why we need to App Store is because it is required to upgrade to High Sierra/the present version of OS X. Out of my own experience, OS X Mavericks will not allow you to login to the app store if you have two step verification – but I would recommend trying, your luck could be better than mine. If you have two step verification enabled, you may have issues updating the the latest Mac OS version. To fix that, all you have to do is to erase the drive again with the disk utility mention earlier – the one catch is that you can only get back to the recovery tools if you restart the computer and start internet recovery again, which as you may have noticed, is a slow process.ĭepending on the age of your Macbook, there is a solid chance that you will end up with an old version of Mac OS. If you hadn’t erased the drive again, there is a good chance no drive will appear in the drive selection. If you properly erased the hard drive a few moments before, you will be able to select the hard drive and continue on. After clicking through for a bit, you will see a page asking you to select a drive.
Unless you created a “time machine” backup, you’ll want to pick the reinstall Mac OS X option. Now go back into the main repair menu by closing the disk utility. First thing you need to do is to select disk utility, select your Macbook’s hard drive and hit erase – this may seem redundant but I’ll explain in a moment. Eventually you will see the Macbook’s recovery tools. Now that the wifi is connected, you need to wait. If you had been able to connect without the boot menu, you should be already be in internet recovery and do not need to press anything. Once you’re connected, you want to hit “cmd + R” from that boot screen. Unfortunately if you’re at UMass, eduroam (or UMASS) won’t work, however you can easily connect to any typical home Wi-Fi or a mobile hotspot (although you should make sure you have unlimited data first). Eventually you will see a screen where you can pick a Wi-Fi network.
To get there, power the computer on, hit the power button and very soon after, hold the option key. Luckily there is another way to connect, via apple’s boot menu. If instead your MacBook lets you select a Wi-Fi network during this process, you’re in the clear and can skip the next paragraph. This tends to be because the Mac assumes it is already connected to Wi-Fi (when its not) and gives an error after it fails to connect to apple servers. There is a bit of a catch: if you do this straight away, there is a good chance that the Mac will get stuck here and throw up an error – error -3001F in my personal experience. The way forward is to use the built-in “internet recovery” which, on startup, can be triggered via pressing “cmd + R”. It may seem like you just bricked your MacBook, but luckily there is a remedy. Enter an administrator password and click OK if prompted. We all know that 128 gb is not enought these so we might have bought something like a an external HDD for some additional storage.If you’re anything like me, you will (or already have) accidentally wiped your Macbook’s ssd. Locate the file Backups.backupdb on the old external drive and drag it to the new external drive.
If you have bought something like a baseline MacBook pro and saved a little cash, but then soon hit with the storage issue when trying to install windows using Bootcamp