I got a Ssd drive, I did a carbon copy from my old drive, it was running Great, but now it's freezing how do I reinstall snow leopard , ive tryed booting from disc but won't work don't know what too do plZ help.
To start the clean install, insert your OS X Snow Leopard disc into your Mac and restart the computer. As soon as you hear the chime of the computer restarting, immediately hold down the 'c' button. Before you do it, the best advice is to back your Mac up so your most important files stay intact. In addition to that, it makes sense to clean up your Mac from old system junk files and application leftovers. The easiest way to do it is to run CleanMyMac X on your machine (download it for free here). Clean Install Mac OS X Snow Leopard 1. Pop in Snow Leopard 2. Boot to CD/DVD by hold down 'C' while booting. Follow the prompts 4. Then head to the Disk Utility and reformat the drive you will be using to install OS X Snow Leopard. Install Snow Leopard by following the prompts. In this video, we learn how to do a clean install of Snow Leopard. First, restart your Mac and when it gives you the chime, hold down the option key. Now, put the disc into the computer and it will load the disk. Click the disk, then it will boot from the Snow Leopard disk. Once it does this, come up with a normal menu named Mac OS X. Mac OS X Snow Leopard (version 10.6) is the seventh major release of Mac OS X (now named macOS), Apple's desktop and server operating system for Macintosh computers. Snow Leopard was publicly.
Corrupt directory and damage are best handled by booting from another hard drive with latest OS, latest Disk Utility, and ultimately, with SuperDuper.
In some cases it is best to clone and repair, then restore back to original, in this case your SSD.
Just as important, to find out why.
Is it the make/model and firmware of the SSD?
Is it known issue with that model?
Are you using Crucial, OWC, what brand?
http://macperformanceguide.com/index_topics.html
Similar Messages
I have a Mac Pro (early 2009) with Mac OS X version 10.6.8, I use this for video editing with FCP7. I would also like to install FCPX, my operating system is Snow Leopard. Is this OK or do I need to up-grade my operating system. I want to be able to use FCP7 and FCPX on the same Computer. Your advise will be appreciated.
You will see from the hardware spec that the latest version of FCP X requires Mavericks.
The Mavericks spec shows you can upgrade to Mavericks on your Mac Pro.
Ensure you have a bucket full of RAM installed.
Final Cut Pro X spec
Mavericks hardware specI have several applications that are not yet compatible with Snow Leopard, I've just bought a Mac Pro 8 core and It comes with snow leopard, is there a problem if I install Leopard 10.5.8 on the Mac Pro and migrate all my information from my Mac Book Pro ?
There is a problem, unfortunately. A Mac can't run an older version of OS X than the version that shipped with it. See here: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2186
En Español: http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2186?viewlocale=es_ESHi,
I'm looking to upgrade from Snow Leapord (10.6.8) to the new Mountain Lion. Have a lot of applications and softwares that I would like to back up when installing the new OS, such as MS Office, Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator. Any ideas on what is the best way to do that.
I'm not too tech savvy, so a simple solution would be appreciated.
Thanks,
ShyamIf your not very tech savvy, I would have someone assist you in the upgrade process as your about to inflict major change on your life and computer.
There are some things to consider before you upgrade.
1: The age of your machine:
My advice has been if your Mac is less than two years old and has a dedicated graphics (not all only Intel HD 3000 or 4000 CPU graphics like the 13' has)) then you stand a very good chance of 10.8 (or 10.7) running fine on your machine.
In either case you need to check the specifications of your machine to see if it meets Apple's requirements, and unfortunately those requirements are a bit low, resulting in a slower machine when you upgrade.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OS_X_Mountain_Lion
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mac_OS_X_Lion
(note: 10.7 is no longer being sold via the AppStore, you should upgrade to 10.8, however some machines can't, you can call Apple Sales to upgrade to 10.7)
If your machine originally came with 10.5, I would say forget it. Mac's don't last forever and laptops usually have a life of about 4 years with normal use. Desktops last longer of course and can withstand more OS X upgrades if Apple allows it.
2: The age of your software.
10.7 and 10.8 will not run PPC based software of old like 10.6 does, also upgrading to 10.8/10.7 may require expensive software upgrades that can hit you unexpected. Consult this site and your other needed software and hardware drivers/software (for printers/scanners,custom keyboards/mice etc) BEFORE you upgrade the operating system.
http://roaringapps.com/apps:table
3: Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper 'clone' (payware)
Your OS X boot partition to a new/reliable, blank powered external drive and use Disk Utility to Repair Permissions on both afterwards. You can hold the option key down and boot from this clone drive to use the computer like before if your OS X upgrade fails and the machine gets bricked. You can also use Disk Utility to erase the entire internal drive and reverse clone if you find out the OS X upgrade is not to your liking.
Make sure all other drives are disconnected, like TimeMachine when cloning or upgrading OS X, thus when you reboot TimeMachine doesn't self update itself, which can lock you out from going back in time to restore from.
Note: If you have Bootcamp, you can clone that with WinClone (payware) to another drive and recreate Bootcamp later and restore it.
4: Some firmware updates can possibly 'BRICK' your hardware
Firmware updates progress in a forward manner and can't be downgraded, so what sometimes occurs is a software error by programmers or a hardware glitch on your machine won't 100% cooperate with the firmware update and thus your machine will fail to function. Sometimes even a interruption in the OS X upgrade or firmware update process will cause the problem. When this occurs, a trip to a Apple Repair is in order and if your machine is out of AppleCare (3 years) or the 1 years standard warranty your looking at a very expensive logicboard replacement. At this time you usually consider the cost not worth it and rather spend the money on the newer machine, especially if it's 2-3 years old. This can come as quite a shock as you expected to pay $20 for a OS X upgrade and now have to buy a whole new machine.
You can't not upgrade the operating system for security and bug fixes, however you make sure you have AppleCare that will protect you for three years if such a hardware bricking occurs. If you don't have AppleCare you might want to reconsider taking the chance upgrading the operating system and thus the firmware.
AppleCare can be purchased within one year of the original machine purchase, it gives one 3 years of care from the date of machine purchase, not from the date of AppleCare purchase.
5: Market share of OS x versions (apx)
10.4 4.5% security updates > no
10.5 15% security updates > no
10.6 52% security updates > yes
10.7 30% security updates > yes
10.8 2 million upgraded so far, just released
6: Your decision to upgrade or not
It depends upon your computer technical ability, the age of your machine, your software investment and your budget.
Can you afford to pay for professional assistance if your upgrade doesn't go as expected? Are you in AppleCare?
Can you afford to pay for upgrades to third party software?
Can you afford the downtime while your machine is being repaired?
Can you live without the 'new features' newer OS versions provide?
Does your hardware even support the newer features?
You might decide the upgrade is not worth it for your older machine and decide to ease yourself into a new machine gradually. I took this approach with my 2006 MacBook Pro, buying a Early 2011 model. I then upgrade to 10.7 on the older 2006 machine and glad I did, because it got bricked. Turned out 10.7 was a pretty awful upgrade and I was out of AppleCare, however 10.8 seems to be 'normal' far as OS X upgrades go, some problems but not mass bricking of machines.Had to restore my Mac Book with Snow Leopard. My i Life disc appears to be damaged, and I can't restore my iPhoto application. I have searched for downloads but all appear to be upgrades. Any ideas on how to restore iphotos
Given what you describe you will have to upgrade Snow Leopard by downloading and installing Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1. Then go to the App Store and sign in with your Apple ID. Purchase and download Mountain Lion to upgrade your OS. Then purchase the latest upgrades for the iLife applications which includes iPhoto.
Or you can go on eBay, Google, or Amazon and purchase another copy of the DVD based iLife.How do I delete photos from iPhoto on my Mac os x snow leopard? Please can someone help? Thanks.
Move the photos you wish to delete to Trash in iPhoto and then empty the Trash in iPhoto by click Empty iPhoto Trash in the pull down menu under iPhoto.
AllanHi all,
I visited my apple store on Sunday who suggested I should reinstall my operating system from scratch.
My MBP is 2009 and I believe came with Snow Leopard installed on it. I have the original disks that came with it to do a fresh install of Snow Leopard, however I am currently running ML.
Do I need to install Snow Leopard, then Lion then upgrade to ML again or can I just boot and do a clean install straight from the USB?
Any help would be appreciated
Thanks,
SarahDo I need to install Snow Leopard, then Lion then upgrade to ML again?
No, it's on a bootable partition now called Recovery HD, hold command r and boot the machine, use Disk Utility to erase the Macintosh HD partition (all files, programs and OS X will be gone) reinstall OS X, you will need a fast internet connection and your AppleID and password.
https://support.apple.com/kb/HT4718
If you don't have a backup, need to perform data recovery BEFORE erasing or reformating the Macintosh HD partiton, then do this, just because OS X isn't booting means you can't access the drive and grab files off.
Create a data recovery/undelete external boot drive
You might be able to fix your problem in place, without a messy erase and install, that's a last option in my book
Run through this and see if it clears your issue, or least gets OSX to boot so you can copy files and important information off first.
Step by Step to fix your Mac
If you have a boot hard drive, when you erase the Macintosh HD partition, use the Security > Erase middle selection as this will improve the drive's data retention. SSD's no need and it's not available.Does anyone know when the retail apple store locations will have the 13inch MBP pre-installed with snow leopard? i called up the local apple stores in my area and they still dont have these yet, maybe they need to get rid of old stock? i understand that snow leopard comes pre-installed when purchased online but i dont want to do that.
Welcome to Apple Discussions!
Are you sure? You realize if you ever find a software title that is not Snow Leopard compatible, but is with older versions of Mac OS X, and you buy a Mac with Snow Leopard prebundled, there likely will be no way of going back to Leopard or earlier. This has been the case with all new Macs once they come prebundled with a new operating system.
Unless you are 100% certain of Snow Leopard compatibility, I would be happy to have this reprieve.Hello I want to sell my Mac Book. Lion already did not run well. Therefore I want to install snow leopard back on it and I want to wipe the computer. But it does not work. When I start the computer with the snow leopard and hold the c and apple button then there is only a white screen. I cannot delete the hard drive with the regular disc utilities program and apple r also does not work. What do I do wrong? Can someone help me here?
Thank you!!It's C on start, not cmd (apple) + C.
Is the Snow Leopard disc the original that shipped with the Mac?
The retail SL disc is only 10.6.3 so won't boot any Mac that shipped with 10.6.3 or later.
It is possible to install SL on an external HD and update it to 10.6.8, then boot to it by holding opt (alt or ⌥) on start up and selecting the external from the list. Erase the internal HDD from the external's Disk Utility (select the top line - the one with the manufacturer's name and the size of the drive).
Then use the restore function in DU to clone the SL installation from the external back to the internal.How do I know what size hard drives I can install? I currently have 4 x 2TB drives installed and am looking to go bigger. 4 x 4TB would be ideal and if you have suggestions on which drives might give me best performance for HD video editing that would be nice too.
Also can I install more RAM?
ere is some information to help.
Mac Pro
Early 2008
Processor 2 x 2.8 GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon
Memory 16 GB 800 MHz DDR2 FB-DIMM
Graphics 2 x NVIDIA GeForce GT 120 512 MB
Software Mac OS X Lion 10.7.3 (11D50b)
Model Name: Mac Pro
Model Identifier: MacPro3,1
Processor Name: Quad-Core Intel Xeon
Processor Speed: 2.8 GHz
Number of Processors: 2
Total Number of Cores: 8
L2 Cache (per Processor): 12 MB
Memory: 16 GB
Bus Speed: 1.6 GHz
Boot ROM Version: MP31.006C.B05
SMC Version (system): 1.25f4
Serial Number (system): G************
Hardware UUID: 47DF4954-C493-50B8-85F3-FC381FA75AD6PCIe SSD controller
www.macperformanceguide.com
That would be $1600 for your 16TB
There are kits to put 2.5' drives (4) in lower optical drive bay. Some WD 10K VR 500GB and 1TB ($200 and $300, 200MB/sec)
32GB 8 x 4GB FBDIMM 800MHz
GTX 570 w/ 10.7.3 from MacVidCardsI think this is called 'a pickle.'
The machine is a 13' MacBook Pro, 2.66 GHz Core 2 Duo w/ 4 GB RAM and a 500 GB HDD.
The HDD has a Snow Leopard 10.6.8 partition, and a Windows XP partition, via Boot Camp. Its Partition Map Scheme, sadly, is a Master Boot Record. I need to reformat it to a GUID Partition Table scheme to install Lion, but when I attempt to boot it from the Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD to wipe the drive, it grey-screens. Dead end.
From what I can gather on the forums, I can't boot a 10.6.8 machine using a Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD. I can't find my grey DVDs for this machine – still looking for those – but I expect those won't work either, being Leopard-generation?
The machine works fine, for the most part, including the optical drive. Has occassional display and wake glitches. Its HDD is backed up on a Drobo via Time Machine. I also have a 15' MBP Core i7 (with the exact same problem: 10.6.8, XP, MBR) which I can use for Target Disk Mode via FireWire. If I try to wipe the HDD on the 13', using Disk Utility on the 15' via Target Disk Mode, will the 13' then boot successfully from the Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD?
I just want to wipe the 13' machine, reinstall a fresh copy of Snow Leopard, then update it to Lion and restore from Time Machine, and never touch anything Windows-related ever again. (And then do the same for my 15', for which I've found my 10.6.3 grey disc. Not sure if that's any more promising.)
Any help appreciated!Sounds like something is wrong with your disk. Have you tried cleaning it?
The Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD is fine – it mounts on both my 13' and 15', and I successfully created an image of it on my 15'. I also tried my wife's Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD, also clean, which produced the same grey screen result.
Have you tried to use boot camp to erase the Windows partition?
Yep, this is supposed to be the proper way to remove a Windows XP partition from Boot Camp, so this was the first thing I tried. I get the same error as everyone with a Master Boot Record scheme appears to get:
The startup disk cannot be partitioned or restored to a single partition.
Back up the disk and use Disk Utility to format it as a single Mac OS X Extended (Journaled) volume. Restore your information to the disk and try using Boot Camp Assistant again.
So, if I can't launch the Disk Utility from the Snow Leopard DVD, my next best guess is wiping it from my 15' over Target Disk Mode. However, if I try that, and still can't get it to boot from the Snow Leopard 10.6.0 DVD, then I'm stuck with an MBP without an OS.
My conclusion – that 10.6.0 DVDs can't boot to 10.6.8 machines – was based on forum posts about downgrading from Lion. I was wondering if there's a way to create a '10.6.8 restore DVD,' and try booting from that. Shot in the dark perhaps.How do I know if I have iphotos' 11 installed on my Mac Book Pro?
Goto Spotlight, little magnifying glass in upper right of screen, and type in iphoto
Double click the top iphoto found to start it
Then click iphoto to reveal the pull down menu and click About iPhoto and that will tell you the version number
AllanUsing snow leopard on a mac desktop. Itunes states that this copy of itunes is corrupted or is no installed correctly. Need help.
Try installing (not updating) iTunes (from scratch).
You can do that from this (Apple) site:
iTunes 11.0.3Hi, i have got a macbook, 13' running with snowleopard 10.6.8 . I want to update to mountain lion - this does not work. How can i do it?
Thanks for answering,What happens when you try?
Error messages?
Is the computer compatible with Mountain Lion?
OS X Mountain Lion system requirements
To install Mountain Lion, you need one of these Macs:
iMac (Mid 2007 or newer)
MacBook (Late 2008 Aluminum, or Early 2009 or newer)
MacBook Pro (Mid/Late 2007 or newer)
MacBook Air (Late 2008 or newer)
Mac mini (Early 2009 or newer)
Mac Pro (Early 2008 or newer)
Xserve (Early 2009)
Your Mac needs:
OS X v10.6.8 or OS X Lion already installed
2 GB or more of memory
8 GB or more of available spaceI have a 2009 iMac and a mid 2007 Macbook. I also have an HTPC running Windows 7. I can connect fine to the HTPC from either the iMac or the Macbook, however, I am completely unable to connect to my Macbook or iMac from my PC. This was never a problem prior to upgrading to Lion from Snow Leopard. Please be advised that I know how to set my network up and have tried everything possible. I upgraded my iMac to Lion first and noticed the problem. After checking my settings I was stumped. I noticed that my PC could still connect to my Macbook running Snow Leopard. I then, today, installed Lion on my Macbook and replicated the problem I was experiencing on my iMac. Any suggestions?
The same happens to me!!! Any help out there?
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Mac OS X Lion is should be available to install as soon as this Thursday. As this is the first Mac App Store OS installation you will be doing, we wanted to share a collection of tips and tasks to perform today, before the official release, so that your Mac is ready for OS X 10.7.
Mac OS X Lion is expected to launch on July 14th alongside new MacBook Air models. The OS X update will be available in the Mac App Store for $29.99.
Install OS X 10.6.8 Update
The first thing you need to do is install the latest OS X update. This update was released in early July to prepare your Snow Leopard Mac and the Mac App Store for the OS X Lion download.
You can download the OS X 10.6.8 update by clicking on the Apple in the upper left of your display and choosing Software Update… or you can download it directly from Apple.
We recommend updating to the latest version of OS X 10.6 today, as the download will likely be much slower on the day OS X 10.7 Lion launches. The only place to get Lion is the Mac App Store, which could put a strain on Apple's servers.
Clean Up Your Mac
In order to download and install OS X Lion we are hearing that you need 4GB free to download the installation file, and possibly 8GB free total to perform the installation. If you have a MacBook or MacBook Pro you probably have plenty of room, but if you are on a MacBook Air you may need to clean off some space on your SSD in order to be ready for Lion.
GrandPerspective Can track down large files for easy backup or removal.
We suggest using the free GrandPerspective tool to find out which folders and files are using up the most storage space. This tool helped us recover 30GB of storage in 10 minutes. We needed to clean house thanks to the small 128GB SSD on our MacBook Air, which had filled up to just 3GB of free space thanks to a lot of random files and several large video projects we didn't need.
If you can't delete the files, move them to an external hard drive for safe storage. Logic 9 mac download. Keep in mind after you delete files they will be removed from future Time Machine backups.
Time Machine Backup
After you install the latest update you should take the time to perform a full Time Machine backup, or backup to whichever cloud service you are using. If you have a spare hard drive nearby, a Time Machine backup will be much faster than a cloud based backup, assuming you start today.
Time Machine is an easy to use backup tool in OS X.
Setting up a Time Machine backup is straightforward and pretty fast. We show you how to get started with a Time Machine Backup in this article. If something goes wrong durin the upgrade process, this backup will allow you to restore your Mac to working order and try again.
Ensure you have a Mac App Store Account
If you have made a purchase in iTunes you should be all set up to purchase OS X Lion in the Mac App Store, but if you haven't set up an Apple ID and payment method now would be a good time to do so.
You can follow the directions from Apple to set up your account. After your Apple ID is configured, log into the Mac App Store and download a free app to make sure everything works as expected.
Prepare a USB Stick for a Clean Lion Install
The Mac App Store download is expected to offer a fast and easy upgrade from Snow Leopard to OS X Lion which will suffice or most users. If you want to perform a clean installation of OS X Lion, you will likely need to create a DVD or USB installation disk using the Mac App Store download.
How to format the MacBook Air USB disk to become an OS X Lion USB drive.
After you prepare your USB drive, you just need to wait for OS X Lion to arrive in the Mac App Store. After you purchase and download the Lion installer you need to extract the disk image and 'burn' it to your USB drive or DVD. You can read the full directions for burning a OS X Lion boot disk at Egg Freckles.
This is not an essential step in preparing for OS X Lion, but certainly one that advanced users may want to take advantage of.
Mac OS X Lion is expected to be available on July 14th via the Mac App store for $29.99. The upgrade is available only on the Mac App store, which means users of older OS X versions will need to upgrade to Snow Leopard first, unless a work around is discovered. You can learn about the new features in OS X Lion, to see why you may want to upgrade to Lion. How to buy the sims 4 for mac.
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