Any truth to swapping out 1.83 Intel Core 2 Dou, Any truth to swapping out 1.83 Intel Core 2 Duo for a 2.33 Intel Core 2 Duo and being able to upgrade from Snow Leopard to anything newer, or am I stuck?

Any positive help would be greatly appreciated!
Hudson

See references 30 and 31 on:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mac_Mini
Also, have you looked at the previous discussions listed on the right side of this page under the heading "More Like This"?

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  • I have a big problem with Lion and PGP. After upgrading from snow leopard to lion I cannot access my PGP drive which was generated under snow leopard. PGP does not start but gives a notion that lion cannot work with my PGP version. Solution?

    After upgrading from Snow Leopard to Lion I cannot access a PGP drive which was generated under snow leopard. PGP does not start. When I try to start I just receive a message that Lion cannot work with PGP. How can I now access important and confifential informatio which I have stored in PGP (snow leopard). Do I have to move back to snow leopard. If so, how can I do this? 

    If you have this product,
    http://www.symantec.com/business/support/index?page=content&id=TECH165159
    you have to go back to Snow Leopard.
    To re-install SL, back up your home directory, format and re-install.

  • How can I upgrade from snow leopard 10.6.8 on an i-Mac 24

    I have an i-Mac 24, possibly pre dating 2007, I've had it four years and bought it from a re-furber.
    But I want to be able to upgrade from snow leopard 10.6.8 ... every time I try I get the response that it is not possible with my device.
    As always, Apple support seems to be like cracking a safe code....so here I am.
    Any advice?
    Yz
    D.rex

    Open the Mac App Store and try downloading Mavericks. If you get told it's incompatible, choose About this Mac from the Apple menu, check if the computer has at least a Xeon or Core 2 Duo(not Core Duo) CPU and 2GB of RAM, and if it does, click here and order a download code for Lion 10.7.
    Back up your data and check your applications for compatibility before upgrading. In particular, Mac OS X 10.7 and newer don't support PowerPC programs such as versions of Microsoft Office prior to 2008.
    (112035)

  • I want to upgrade to Lightroom 5, but I'm concerned about compatibility with my 2008 intel Core 2 Duo iMac with only 4G of Ram.  Will I be able to run Lighroom 5 if I upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion?

    I want to upgrade to Lightroom 5, but I'm concerned about compatibility with my 2008 intel Core 2 Duo iMac with only 4G of Ram.  Will I be able to run Lightroom 5 okay if I upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion?  What will happen to the applications that aren't 64-bit compatible?  Also the Eye-one Display 2 colorimeter to calibrate the monitor will not run on Lion, so that will be an expensive upgrade to an i1DisplayPro. Is the upgrade important enough to offset the expense?  I have an Epson R2000 printer.  Will there be problems with the drivers if I upgrade to Lion?  It would be great to hear from other mac users who are also photographers and who print their own photos.    

    Before upgrading to Lion be sure to read this link:
    https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-6271
    Adobe lists these requirements:
    http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshop-lightroom/tech-specs.html
    Looking at http://www.everymac.com/ even the earliest 2008 iMac was fully 64 bit, even though Boot Camp doesn't support 64 bit Windows on that machine.

  • System freezes when attempting to upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion

    I hope someone can help me out there.  I have downloaded the Lion upgrade install program and built an install disk on my jump drive using Lion Diskmaker 2.0.2, but when I tried to upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion using the jump drive, the install freezes at 24% and I cannot reboot or anything.  It just keeps coming back to the install screen.  Any suggestions?

    This could be due to a number of causes. If you have the Lion installer application, then I suggest you put it in your Downloads folder. Now do this:
    Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions
    Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu. After DU loads select your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list.  In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive.  If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer.
    If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior and/or Tech Tool Pro to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X.
    When you've done the above you should now double-click on the Lion installer application in your Applications folder. When prompted click on the Install button. Note that you will not use the flash drive you made as you shouldn't need it. And, this will avoid any issues with a bad flash drive installer.

  • Upgrading from Snow Leopard (10.6.8) to Mountain Lion

    So I purchased Mountain Lion online and received the redeem code from Apple. I've redeemed the download for Mountain Lion but have been having issues trying to even initiate the download. I've gone into system preferences and turned off the computer's sleep mode to prevent the computer from going to sleep during the download. When I click download, the App Store seems to load for a second and then it just goes back to saying download (as if I never pressed the button, or at least that's what it looks like). I have gotten it to start downloading once (as indicated by the icon that appeared in my dock), but about mid-way through it failed and said I had to retry.
    I'm upgrading from Snow Leopard (v10.6.8) so I don't have launchpad. I'm also limited in my ability to get fast internet (I have to go to a coffee shop to get decent internet where I live). So I guess a couple questions:
    1. Is there a minimum internet speed requirement for downloading Mountain Lion? (If not, I'm willing to wait at the coffee shop even if it takes a while)
    2. If it isn't necessarily an internet speed issue, could it possibly be downloading somewhere where I can't see it download? (although I this seems unlikely as I have had the download appear in my dock on at least one occassion)
    3. Is there anything else on my end that might be causing issues with the download that anyone can think of? (I've called apple a couple of times already so I just wanna make sure there isn't anything glaring that I might be missing before I try to call them again)
    If there is any other info that might help diagnose the situation, let me know and I'll try to describe what's happening on my end
    Thanks!

    Yeah, that's pretty much what I have (1.5 MBps down and up). The connection isn't consistent though (it drops and reconnects on an inconsistent basis). I guess the problem I'm having is getting the download to even initiate, which has, to my knowledge, only happened once (this morning). I go back to school on Wednesday where I have a 10 MBps down and up connection. Trying to get this done as soon as possible with school starting up again next week to try and make sure everything is up and running smoothly.

  • After upgrade from snow leopard to lion, where is application front row?

    After upgrade from snow leopard to lion, where is application front row? i realize it when to use my remote. any one knows about this matter?

    OK - Fixed it. 
    Turns out the cure is to use the Webcal Interface to re-create the delegations.  A bit tedious, but doing this presumably forces a rewrite of the file that previously cannot be accessed.  Means you need to set up the delegation again for each account - but this at least is an improvement over not being able to do anything at all.
    Once fixed, delegation works just fine.
    Hope this helps someone else solve the issue etc.

  • HT2476 How do I upgrade from snow leopard 10.6.8 to lion 10.7?

    I get an error message when tryin gto access the mac app store from my apple menu and any browser. I want to upgrade to iMovie '11 from '09. I also want to upgrade from snow leopard to lion.

    Depends upon your machine if it can handle Lion or not.
    Did you read the minimal specs? 2GB of RAM and a Intel Core 2 Duo (not Intel Core Duo) it really needs 4GB of RAM.
    I don't advise any machine that came with 10.5 originally to upgrade to Lion, it's just too much for that older hardware and 10.8 is coming out very soon and that will not run on a lot of older machines so your behind again and having to buy all new software.
    As you should know, your investment in PPC based software and hardware drivers for third party machines is not going to work in 10.7.
    http://roaringapps.com/apps:table
    Perhaps you might want to wait for a new 10.8 or 10.9 machine.
    If your sure about Lion, I highly advise making a bootable clone on a blank external drive first, makes it a cinch to come back to Snow.
    Or at least disconnect your TimeMachine drive so it stays on 10.6, then you can erase from the disk and restore from TM.
    Most commonly used backup methods
    Either that you will have to do it the "hard way"
    How to revert your Mac to Snow Leopard
    Try MAS again later, or get a faster Internet connection.

  • Upgrading from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion.

    I want to upgrade from Snow Leopard (OS X 10.6.8) to Mountain Lion. I'm worried there will be compatibility issues with software like iPhoto and iMovie and such. I'm not using the new iLife software. Also I'm wondering if there will be any app compatibility problems. I'm also using Microsoft Office 2011. Please help put my mind at ease.

    First check the compatibility of your Mac...
    Upgrade to Mountain Lion
    But... Before attempting any Major Upgrade... get yourself an External Hard Drive... and create a Bootable Clone Backup of your current Hard Drive...
    By far the easiest way to make such a Backup, is to use something like
    SuperDuper  http://www.shirt-pocket.com/
    or CCC  http://www.bombich.com/
    That way, should anything untoward happen during the Upgrade,
    you will NOT LOSE ANYTHING.
    (Get an EHD that is at least equal to your current Drive...)
    Check here for compatibility of 3rd party Software you may be using...
    http://roaringapps.com/apps:table

  • Upgrade from Snow Leopard?

    Adobe through a monkey wrench into my plans to sit comfortably with OSX 10.6.8 and not rock the boat with something that works. I'm a Creative Cloud member and utilize many of the CC apps including After Effects. The new After Effects CC now requires OSX minimum of 10.7.4. Lion).
    I've been reading many of the comments about upgrading from Snow Leopard and am now quite uneasy about attempting it due to all the conflicting remarks about it. I do have AE CS6 and can operate on it for a while, but the new features in AE CC are not offered as updates to CS6 programs.
    Questions:
    Is there an automated approach to determine if my current NON APPLE applications will work with either Lion OR Mountain Lion ?
    I have NO power pc applications
    I do not use Boot camp, parallels or anything similar. Windows software does not exist on this machine.
    I do use MS Office for Mac 2011, including Outlook.
    I assume that Apple is probably working on the next OSX incarnation to succeed Mountain lion and that It may be timed to be coincident with the new Mac Pro release which is a hazy mirage of "sometime later this year". Point being, is it worth it to wait until that future incarnation settles down with the inevitable bugs blown off?
    Any help would be appreciated,
    Ken

    kenackr wrote:
    Adobe through a monkey wrench into my plans to sit comfortably with OSX 10.6.8 and not rock the boat with something that works. I'm a Creative Cloud member and utilize many of the CC apps including After Effects. The new After Effects CC now requires OSX minimum of 10.7.4. Lion).
    It's B.S. like this that is forcing me to switch to Windows 7 which remain as is and get updates until 2020.
    On a good monitor, Win 7 doesn't look nearly as bad as OS X, longevity and stability is key asset, I can always restore from System Restore Images if it gets seriously hosed, else System Restore reverts back to the last updated state.
    Since it's expected that by 2015 tablets will outsell traditional computers in the consumer space, doesn't bode to well for many Mac's which chiefly target the consumer market and the professional market to a lesser degree.
    Apple has already discontinued the MacBooks and the 17" MacBook Pro, so it might be shortly that only PC laptops will be the choice of professionals for their more versatility than consumer tablets.
    Anyway the future isn't looking too bright.
    I've been reading many of the comments about upgrading from Snow Leopard and am now quite uneasy about attempting it due to all the conflicting remarks about it. I do have AE CS6 and can operate on it for a while, but the new features in AE CC are not offered as updates to CS6 programs.
    A professional setup is a whole different animal than a consumer machine where they can care less as it won't cost them money if the machine is down for some time.
    It's likely best you buy a new MacPro and ease into it rather than take your chances on the Lions because they take some getting used to their strangeness.
    I advise you also to join the chorus and complain on the Adobe forums about what they are doing to force upgrade you for their purposes.
    Slightly over 25% of OS X version market share is on Snow Leopard and many of them because they are running PPC based apps they can't get anymore.
    So I'm assuming there will be quite a uproar on the Adboe forums over this, or else you can be the first to kick it off.
    Adobe is trying to push, but if enough people push back and start to look for alternatives, Adobe will have to cave in because their sales are down big time as the print media industry is dying, thus less need for artists and the CS suite.
    Is there an automated approach to determine if my current NON APPLE applications will work with either Lion OR Mountain Lion ?
    I have NO power pc applications
    I do not use Boot camp, parallels or anything similar. Windows software does not exist on this machine.
    I do use MS Office for Mac 2011, including Outlook.
    Not automated, but user submitted information here.
    http://roaringapps.com/apps:table
    I assume that Apple is probably working on the next OSX incarnation to succeed Mountain lion and that It may be timed to be coincident with the new Mac Pro release which is a hazy mirage of "sometime later this year". Point being, is it worth it to wait until that future incarnation settles down with the inevitable bugs blown off?
    I would if your planning on buying a new MacPro.
    Don't kill your present money making machine with the Lions, it's just not worth it.
    Now you CAN clone your present boot drive to a external powered drive, option/alt boot from it and upgrade that to the Lions to get you by until the new MacPro is released and you can get fully up on that.
    Most people need Snow Leopard for some reason or another, installing it on a paritition or via a virtual machine is a bit of a pain.
    Snow Leopard is really fast, the Lions are fully 64bit and act more like dump trucks, RAM gobblers 4-8GB+ and a SSD on a newer issue Early 2011+ laptop or 2010+ iMac/Mac Pro is better suited for them.
    I think the new MacPro + Mavericks is the way to go, keep the Snow Leopard machine working while the bugs and Adboe issues are worked out, then of course is the new OS XI version coming after that is the more pernament solution for longterm.
    Most commonly used backup methods
    Plan your moves carefully, don't let the arses at Adobe push you off a perfectly working machine into a OS X upgrade that can fail horribly and brick your logicboard/firmware with no AppleCare coverage to fall back onto.
    I had 10.7 kill a 2007 MacBook Pro I upgraded from 10.6, it was 4 years old and Apple wouldn't fix it.
    So don't upgrade OS X out of AppleCare unless it's a spare machine, certainly not your working machine.

  • Will upgrading from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion create problems within Premiere projects?

    I'm looking at the probability of upgrading from Mac OSX 10.6 to 10.8 (Mountain Lion).  I have to if I want to install or upgrade just about anything at this point.
    I was hoping to wait until the latest Premiere project was finished to avoid creating possible discrepancies between how the project plays back before and after the upgrade.  I'll skip the details and just say that it might be best if I do the upgrade now and install a new GPU to help with the massive amounts of rendering/playback needed.  Will upgrading from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion cause any likely problems?  No other Adobe apps are involved with this project.
    I'm running a Mac Pro 5,1 and Adobe CS6.  I have two separate clone drives of my current boot disk as well as a Time Machine back up.  So I can go back if I really need to.  I'll also make sure the project is saved manually elsewhere.
    Thanks for any input!

    I'm Win, not Mac, but I do have a couple saved messages
    Mac 10.8.3 Bug w/Encore and BluRay http://forums.adobe.com/thread/1198709
    -create folder not ISO http://forums.adobe.com/thread/1216127

  • Upgrade from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion erase my Windows partition?

    Dear all,
    I know some one might have asked it but I just wanna re-confirm.
    Would the upgrade from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion erase my Windows partition? I am currently using Bootcamp on my Macbook Pro (Late 2010 Version) and I do not have parallel desktop. I asked the same question when Lion was released, but HK Apple Store said YES and Melbourne Apple Store said no. I am a bit confused now.
    Thank you for answering. Cheers!

    Nothing.
    That said, you should ALWAYS have a backup as anything can happen at anytime.

  • I am new to mac's and have upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion but......

    I am new to mac's and have upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion but not all my application will work. Is it save to reinstall using original snow leopard dvd and does it wipe all my other application like apature? I am in a panic over this, any help!!
    I came across this online and i want to know is it safe to do this:
    Backup your User folders to an external drive. This should preserve your documents, photos, music, etc. If you store those things in locations not in the User folder, make sure to copy those over too.
    Insert the Snow Leopard disc. Restart your Mac and hold down C to boot to your DVD drive.
    Go to Utilities in the menu bar once the installer pops up and select “Disk Utility.”
    Find the drive in the sidebar where Lion is installed, select it and navigate to the Partition tab.
    Click on the drop down menu under Partition Layout and select “1 Partition.” Hit Apply.
    Now navigate to the Erase tab and make sure “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)” is selected, then hit Erase to delete all data on the drive.
    Quit Disk Utility to get back to the Snow Leopard installer and proceed with the install.
    Restore your User folder and documents from your backup.
    Run Software Update to get everything current, install your apps from your original install media and update those as well.
    if any one can help me that would be great, thanks Mike

    Before you do that why not do this first:
    Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions
    Boot from your Lion Recovery HD. When the recovery menu appears select Disk Utility. After DU loads select your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list.  In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive.  If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the main menu.
    To boot from the Recovery HD restart the computer. After the chime hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager screen appears. Select the Recovery HD and click on the downward pointing arrow button.
    If this doesn't help, then you can proceed to reinstall Snow Leopard as follows:
    Downgrade Lion to Snow Leopard
    1.  Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer Disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button.  When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
    2. After DU loads select your hard drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the left side list. Note the SMART status of the drive in DU's status area.  If it does not say "Verified" then the drive is failing or has failed and will need replacing.  SMART info will not be reported  on external drives. Otherwise, click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    3. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    4. Quit DU and return to the installer. Install Snow Leopard.
    This will erase the whole drive so be sure to backup your files if you don't have a backup already. If you have performed a TM backup using Lion be aware that you cannot restore from that backup in Snow Leopard. I suggest you make a separate backup using Carbon Copy Cloner 3.4.1.
    This will erase the drive so be sure to backup your files before doing this.

  • Search in finder doesn't find my files in OS 10.8, upgrade from snow Leopard to Mountain Lion

    after i upgraded from snow leopard to mountain lion . when i try too search files on finder . it does not find any of them although all the files are still there .so i need scroll up and down for few minutes to find my file manually . what could be the problem ?? anyone can help me with this .. thanks in advance

    Hmm... didn't help me. But, I'm glad to know that I can "refresh" the search profiles. That may come in handy in the future.
    I'm having similar problems where I can see a file from within an application, but the file doesn't show up in a Finder search. The file I see in the application also isn't visible in that application's folder (where it's supposed to be stored, in this case).
    The file exists, because I'm able to work on it from within the application. However, it can't be found on the computer by any means I have available. I've spoken with the manufacturer of the software and they told me where to look for the file, but it isn't there (as far as I can see). Of course, they suggest the Finder is "broken" and needs to be fixed. I don't think that's the case. I can easily find other files without difficulty.
    Could what I'm looking for be a "hidden" file?

  • Mavericks upgrade from Snow Leopard broke boot camp. Help!

    Since Apple made the newest version of OS X free, I decided to upgrade my 2010 MacBookPro from Snow Leopard. The installation seemed to go fine, but after the installation, I can't boot into my Bootcamp / Windows partition. From what I have read so far, others have experienced this issue upgrading from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion because the recovery partition apparently messes up something fragile between the MBR (Master Boot Record) and the GPT (GUID Partition Table). I'm not sure if that's what's going wrong here or not.
    When I attempt to repair /dev/disk0s4 via the GUI Disk Utility, I get the following details:
    Verify and Repair volume “disk0s4”
    Checking file system** /dev/disk0s4
    Invalid BS_jmpBoot in boot block: 6e0020
    Volume repair complete.Updating boot support partitions for the volume as required.
    Error: Disk Utility can’t repair this disk. Back up as many of your files as possible, reformat the disk, and restore your backed-up files.
    Here's a screen shot:
    http://imgur.com/6XLYMOM
    Well, I can't mount the partition to copy off my files, and I just want to be able to go back to using my windows partition normally. So I started Googling and found several different threads, but so far I'm a few hours into trying to get my system back, without a clue as to what the right fix is.
    Upgrading the OS on one partition of a HDD shouldn't completely break another partition. Is my case just a freak accident, or is this a serious flaw in the upgrade process? Sifting through 250GB of data (1/2 my laptop drive) is going to take some of these tools a while... I'm not a happy customer today.
    Aside from spending upwards of 12 hours reinstalling Windows and the dozens of other applications and data files from backups and recovering all the files that I can, does anyone know of any tools that can recover the lost partition should I find it? I'm going to leave testdisk running over the disk while I sleep to try and find filesystems.

    I had Windows 7 64-bit installed, but the version is irrelevant. The problem here is that *something* Apple's installer did damaged my working computer. The fact that it damaged others as well and apparently hasn't been fixed since the release of Mountain Lion is very disappointing. Boot camp is a supported Apple product, and we pay a premium for Apple's computers so we should expect better than for an upgrade to blithely destroy our data and tools leaving us to spend days restoring. That's no upgrade. It's a minefield. I'm happy if some good comes from my sharing and it helps others make better decisions than to trust the installer not to screw up their week. Make sure you back up your whole disk image before installing. The upgrade is only free if your time is worthless.
    I'm still looking for an easy fix to this problem. The disk scanning software I'm running now is taking a long time to search through the 500GB HDD for information. I fear that the addition of the recovery partition wiped out my NTFS partition's file system entirely. It's inevitable that I haven't backed up all my stuff and that I have lost some amount of data in addition to my time.

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