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Recovering data from an old 2009 Mac laptop using HDD methods

Recovering data from an old 2009 Mac laptop using HDD methods

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tiago115
Member
59
10-31-2016, 02:50 PM
#11
Yes, it was a feature that was typical on older Macs and laptops.
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tiago115
10-31-2016, 02:50 PM #11

Yes, it was a feature that was typical on older Macs and laptops.

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Lucmus3
Member
60
10-31-2016, 06:00 PM
#12
You should be able to remove the drives and plug them into another functioning machine. A Mac would make the process much simpler, though there are HFS+ file system drivers available. Perfectly fine to use a Mac if you prefer, but keep in mind there are no SAS drives for it. Older Intel Macs typically use SATA connections, which is standard. SAS technology never became popular for Macs either. You're probably considering SCSI, which was supported on Macs until the late 90s.
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Lucmus3
10-31-2016, 06:00 PM #12

You should be able to remove the drives and plug them into another functioning machine. A Mac would make the process much simpler, though there are HFS+ file system drivers available. Perfectly fine to use a Mac if you prefer, but keep in mind there are no SAS drives for it. Older Intel Macs typically use SATA connections, which is standard. SAS technology never became popular for Macs either. You're probably considering SCSI, which was supported on Macs until the late 90s.

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FelicieGirl
Member
50
11-08-2016, 03:45 AM
#13
My bad, wrong SCSI version...
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FelicieGirl
11-08-2016, 03:45 AM #13

My bad, wrong SCSI version...

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Fireking124
Senior Member
576
11-08-2016, 11:42 AM
#14
Macs never relied on SAS. They employed SCSI, though as BondiBlue mentioned, it was retired in the 90s to early 2000s.
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Fireking124
11-08-2016, 11:42 AM #14

Macs never relied on SAS. They employed SCSI, though as BondiBlue mentioned, it was retired in the 90s to early 2000s.

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