Use Time Machine, the built-in backup feature of your Mac, to automatically back up your personal data, including apps, music, photos, email, and documents. Having a backup allows you to recover files that were deleted, or that were lost because the hard disk (or SSD) in your Mac needed to be erased or replaced. Learn how to restore your Mac from a backup.
TomHeaven released this on Jul 30, 2020 This release works on Intel Hashwell or newer CPU. This release version is built for Tensorflow 2.3.0 for Python 3.7 on Mac OS X 10.13 with CUDA support. Supported CUDA compute capability: 3.5,5.0,5.2,6.1,7.0. Unrelated, but anyone using this to setup PDI 9.0 on their mac should know that the macOS dark theme is not handled properly by PDI, where text isn't rendered in spoon properly. They'll need to switch to Light mode (via System Preferences General). CharlesWang added a comment - 26/Sep/20 11:47 PM.
To create backups with Time Machine, all you need is an external storage device. After you connect the storage device and select it as your backup disk, Time Machine automatically makes hourly backups for the past 24 hours, daily backups for the past month, and weekly backups for all previous months. The oldest backups are deleted when your backup disk is full.
Connect one of the following external storage devices, sold separately. Learn more about backup disks that you can use with Time Machine.
After you select a backup disk, Time Machine immediately begins making periodic backups—automatically and without further action by you. The first backup may take a long time, but you can continue using your Mac while a backup is underway. Time Machine backs up only the files that changed since the previous backup, so future backups will be faster.
To start a backup manually, choose Back Up Now from the Time Machine menu in the menu bar. Use the same menu to check the status of a backup or skip a backup in progress.