A survivor's guide to family Mac upgrades

13.07.2009

If you've received such a paper-lashing (and have recovered from the shame of same) you know that, even with the best intentions, we sometimes leave these jobs undone. So that I may avoid a week on the couch, let me offer some general pre- and post-upgrade advice for those working on a loved one's computer.

If your victim is like most people, they will have entered an e-mail password once and then promptly forgotten it. Before performing a major upgrade, ask them if they know their e-mail password(s). If not, ask for their administrator's password and have a look around the Mac's keychain, making note of the e-mail passwords you find.

Also, travel to ~/Library/Keychains, make a copy of the login.keychain file, and tuck it away in a safe place (on a USB key drive, for instance). Should you need to rummage around in it later because some password didn't survive the upgrade, you can move some of its passwords or other login information to the new login keychain. (I'd do this by renaming the old keychain file, opening it in Keychain Access, and dragging the needed items from the old to new keychain. You'll need the Administrator's password from the old account to do this.)

You know what they say about assuming. Yes, I assumed that the printer would work after the upgrade but didn't bother to test it. Turns out that Leopard didn't include the printer driver for my wife's HP LaserJet printer. Had I tried to print I would have known the printer was MIA and would have taken steps to download the driver directly from .

Go ahead and sever your connection to the Web for a day and see how you like it. Thankfully this is something I did. You should too.