I'm considering getting one of those cables I listed above in case this situation comes up again, Target Disk Mode is nice but it requires shutting down the Mac and booting into this mode to work.
I did this with my own MacBook Pro so I could get files on my brother's MacBook, for some reason we couldn't network the computers so we used Target Disk Mode instead. This can be demonstrated further by putting your MacBook into Target Disk Mode and it's internal drives will appear as a USB storage devices to another computer connected by a USB-C to USB-C cable or USB-C to USB-A cable. The actual KVM function they advertise with these cables is just software, it requires installing and setting up software on both computers before it can work.Īs demonstrated by you seeing your MacBook as a billboard device on your PC the MacBook has all the hardware it needs to become a functional USB device to another computer. These cables will not transfer power, only data, so for now you have to choose one or the other. That last link will actually peel back the curtain and admit they use a Prolific PL-27A1 chipset to make the connection, which all those cables likely do. An Ethernet or Wi-Fi connection could do much the same but because of the lower bandwidth it would not be nearly as responsive. They claim the cable allows KVM features but my guess is that it's just no different than any of a number of similar cables that emulate an Ethernet connection at 5 Gbps and the rest is just software. It's not a USB-C cable but put a couple USB-C adapters on each end and pretend it is. Here's something that might work for you.