Boot camp for snow leopard

I reinstalled snow leopard and i am trying to use boot camp 3.0 to install vista. I keep getting the start up disk needs to be a single partition. I believe it is. what do i need to do now

If You Have Problems Creating a PartitionIf you have problems creating a Windows partition, check the following:
  The disk must be a single partition, formatted as Mac OS Extended (Journaled).If the disk already has more than one partition, you must repartition it.
  The disk must be an internal disk. You cannot use Boot Camp Assistant to installWindows on an external disk.
  If a dialog appears saying “The disk cannot be partitioned because verificationfailed,” try repairing the disk using Disk Utility and opening Boot Camp Assistantagain. If that doesn’t work, back up all the information on your computer, start upfrom your Mac OS X installation disc, and erase the disk using Disk Utility. Restorethe information to your computer from the backup and try opening Boot CampAssistant again.
You can go to the terminal and type "diskutil list" without the quotes and see if there is a mystery partition.

Similar Messages

  • Install Leopard with boot camp on snow leopard.

    I upgraded to Snow Leopard and have a piece of line 6 hardware that is not compatible. Updated drivers are taking forever to come out and I need to use this hardware. I'm wondering if it would be possible to use boot camp to install leopard from the installation disk included with my macbook so that I can boot to it to use the line 6 device.
    Any help would be appreciated.

    The easiest way is to use Disk Utility in the Utilities folder to create a 2 partition set up. Disk Utility will be able to do this without erasing your existing information.
    - Select your volume the one with the disk size at the top
    - Click on Partition
    - Change the Volume Scheme to 2 partitions
    - Answer any messages and such
    I am sorry since I have mine partitioned with BootCamp for my Windows 7 partition, I am unable to describe all of the steps as BootCamp locks me out of performing the rest of the steps.

  • Create boot disc for snow leopard

    Can you create a boot disc DVD for Snow Leopard without the original intallation copy?

    No. You need the installer DVD that came originally with your computer or a retail disc with a later version of OS X. The current retail Snow Leopard DVD installs 10.6.3. If your computer came with a later version of Snow Leopard, then you will need the DVD that came with your computer.

  • Boot Camp on Snow Leopard can't install Windows-Stuck on black BIOS screen

    I'm running Snow Leopard 10.6.8 on an early 2008 Mac Pro (dual 3.2Ghz Harperton CPU's, 10gb RAM) with Boot Camp version 3.0.4 (all updated). I've successfully had a Boot Camp partition in the past, running WindowsXP32 Bit. I just purchased Windows7 Professional and can't install either the 32bit or 64 bit version. Neither can I install any of my original Windows disc. Boot Camp successfully creates the partion, then asks me to install the Windows install DVD/CD which I do, and then when it reboots, it gets stuck in a black BIOS screen that says "Initializing..."
    I've tried all my Windows discs: WindowsXP-32bit, Vista-32Bit, Vista-64Bit, Windows7-32Bit, Windows7-64Bit. Same problem...gets hung on the black BIOS screen. I disconnected all my USB hardware except for my keyboard/mouse. All my other internal drives are disconnected.
    The only thing that I can think of is that is different is my MacHD is a 500GB Seagate MomentusXT solid state hybrid drive.
    Any help is greatly appreciated!!!!!!!
    Thanks

    Hi fellow Mac buddie,
    I just zapped the PRAM, and also reset the SMC switch on the mother board.....no luck.
    In refenece to the hybrid SSD drive, I've already taken that one out, put in a fresh 3.5" drive, formatted and installed  a fresh clean version of Lion OS, and then attempted the Boot Camp install using Lion with the newest Boot Camp version (3.1 or 3.2) Please see my original post above.
    Same issue, black BIOS screen.
    Also tried Boot Camp Windows install on a second drive in drive bay 2 (an option now in Lion's Boot Camp)
    same issue, black BIOS screen.
    Lastly, I've tried all these interations using my three different Windows install disks (XP, Vista, Windows7).
    XP is a "full install" disk, Vista and Windows7 are upgrade disks. But I've had XP installed previously using Boot Camp with no problem. So I'm confused I can't even install XP.
    As another option, I went to a friend who has a PC, and I installed Windows 7 on a new hard drive. I'm about to install that in drive bay 2, reboot while holding down "option", and see if I can boot directly into that disk.
    That's a workaround, as is VMWare Fusion which I have and Windows7 works fine as a virtual machine.
    But when something doesn't work the way it's supposed to (in this case Boot Camp), it bugs me makes me want to know why it doesn't. I'll report back with regard to the 2nd bay Windows7 hard drive install.
    SPY500

  • Install windows 7 32-bit using boot-camp on snow-leopard

    I have Snow-Leopard running on my MacBook. I want to install Windows 7 32-bit Professional. I have already purchased copy of Windows from Amazon. I never'ed install Windows on my MacBook till date, so I don't know what to do, and how to install it.
    Please share your experiences of installing Windows using Boot-Camp. I need screen-shots or video that can help me with installation.

    Windows 7 requires Mac OS X v10.6 Snow Leopard and the Boot Camp 3.1 Update. For complete system requirements information, see http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1899
    The 3.1 update is here http://support.apple.com/kb/DL996
    The 3.2 update is here http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1333
    Here's a couple of sites that helped me when I used Boot Camp to install Windows XP.
    http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/Boot_Camp_Install-Setup.pdf
    http://www.askdavetaylor.com/how_do_i_install_windows_xp_on_my_mac_using_boot_ca mp_1.html

  • Com port failed with boot camp and snow leopard - Please help!

    Hi. I have been a very happy leopard and macbook user for the last couple of years. This week I upgraded to a macbook pro with OS X 10.6 snow leopard. I set up boot camp with Windows XP SP3as I have a couple of windows only applications that I need to use and they both need serial port. I had a Keyspan USA 19-QW serial adaptor that worked fine with Leopard and my old macbook. I installed the driver that came with the Keyspan adaptor. Now when I plug the adaptor into the USB slot it finds new hardware and says it is ready to use and the adaptor is listed in my ports as being on COM3 in device manager in windows but when I try to run the programs I get the message 'the selected port could not be opened. Either the port is in use by another application, or the port doesn't exist'. I'd be very grateful for any advice you can give me to solve this problem. Do I need to buy a new adaptor? Is this a settings or driver issue? I'm a user and not a techie person so please can you leave me easy step by step help. Many thanks. Karen

    And was wodering if snow Leopard is pré installed
    Yes.
    And also which disc that came with thé machine has boot camp on it
    None. Windows is a separate purchase.
    i havé read that to install windows7 you need to pût thé snow leopard disc in to complete thé installation
    That refers to the Boot Camp drivers for Windows, not Windows itself.
    (53272)

  • Can't Install Boot Camp from Snow Leopard DVD in Windows 7

    I have an iMac "Core 2 Duo" 3.06 24-inc (08) running 10.6.2 and Windows 7.
    I was able to successfully use the Boot Camp Assistant to partition and install Windows 7 on my iMac. After the installation, I was able to download updates from Windows Updates which included video drivers.
    However, when I inserted my Snow Leopard DVD to install Boot Camp 3.0, the Setup.exe only gave me two options: To Install Mac OS X remotely and to install CD/DVD Sharing. I was not presented any options to install Boot Camp.
    I did manually navigate the Snow Leopard DVD and found a Boot Camp directory with its own setup.exe and when I clicked on it, it gave me an Installation Error stating "Boot Camp x64 is unsupported on this computer model". I did some research and I found no mention of my iMac listed as an unsupported model.
    Any help would be appreciated.

    When I inserted Snow Leopard DVD, the autorun didn't show me an option to install Boot Camp Drivers. Just like the author of this topic, it only showed me 2 options: to Install Mac OS X remotely and to install CD/DVD Sharing.
    Then, I've run Windows Explorer, navigated to Snow Leopard DVD, opened Boot Camp folder and runned "setup.exe". The installer opened and Boot Camp 3.0 was installed successfully.
    I don't know if it could help you guys with that error message, but after the installation of Windows 7 64bits, I've rebooted my Macbook Pro. Only after the reboot I did the Boot Camp Drivers installation.
    You can also try to run the "setup.exe" as Administrator (right-click, Run as administrator).
    Also, my Snow Leopard DVD is that grey one with the white "Mac OS X Install DVD" labelled on it.

  • Boot Camp on Snow Leopard

    I'm running OS X 10.4 Tiger, going to upgrade to 10.6 soon, just planning ahead --
    Thinking about using Boot Camp/stop using Parallels, as I have an old version/must upgrade it for Snow..
    Can I install more than 1 version of Windows using Boot Camp, like in Parallels you can have numerous virtual machines (operating systems) ?
    Anyone using boot camp in 10.6 ---- how is it so far ?
    Thanks,
    Bob

    No. Only one Boot Camp partition is allowed on the drive, so you can only install one version of Windows at a time. Same as any other Windows computer.
    Since OS X is not in use when booted into Windows via Boot Camp it really doesn't matter which version of OS X is installed at the time. Using Windows via Boot Camp is not like using virtualization software. Boot Camp simply creates a bootable partition on which you can install and boot Windows. It provides a way to dual-boot the computer's hardware for native use under OS X or Windows, but not both concurrently.
    I suggest you run the Boot Camp Assistant in the Utilities folder and click on the button to print out the documentation. Then read it carefully.

  • Parallels 7 or boot camp on snow leopard

    I own a MacBook Pro 13 [mid 2009]. I've upgraded it to 8gb ram.
    My problem is I'm not able to decide if I should install windows 7 using parallels 7 or boot camp.
    Also will it slow down the machine.
    And I also need help in installing windows7.

    If you use boot camp you will then have a Dual Boot system running each OS separately. If you use Parallels you will be running Win 7 on top of OS X being able to use both OSs at the same time.
    BC Win 7 will have complete access to all hardware and resources
    Parallels Win 7 will only have access to the VM resources, and physical hardware resources, you assign to it through Parallels. It would be slightly slower and make OS X run slightly slower. But you don't have to leave one OS to go to the other. Also with a VM install of Win 7 you don't have to pre define and use up as much physical hard drive space. The VM install will only use the amount of physical hard drive space as the VM needs. Expanding when needed and otr you can expand it or create a second Virtual Disk. Can't do that with BC.
    Pluses and Minuses with both types of installs.

  • For boot camp on snow leopard  do i want 32 bit or 64 bit for windows seven?

    can some help me out? and i dont have the restore disk for the drivers? will it still work? and 32 bit or 64 bit?

    Then you have 32bit system. If there is 64bit, its explicitly written in name of OS. Or try msinfo32 from command line, it open information window about OS and there are all important info.
    Lenovo T440s, 20AQ0067MC, Windows 8.1 Pro x64 UEFI, Samsung 840 EVO SSD 250 GB, 8 GB RAM
    Lenovo T430s, 2356LQG, Windows 8.1 Pro x64 UEFI, Intel 520 SSD 180 GB, 8 GB RAM
    Lenovo T420s, 4171-6SG, Windows 8 Pro x64 UEFI, Intel 320 SSD 120 GB, 8 GB RAM
    Lenovo T400s, 2808-CYG, Windows 7 Ultimate x64

  • How to install SSD as a boot drive for Snow leopard? I am confused...

    Hello; This is first time I will use SSD on my macpro. I ordered the SSD from amazon and it will come next week I hope. I need some help and advice. My boot drive is HDD (Macintosh HD) now. So, I Want to move from the HDD to SSD. What's the easiest and guarentee way to do it? I am not a good technician. I've read about carbon copy cleaner or disk utility to back-up everything to another drive, boot from there then select the SSD. Is this needed? Cant I just directly copy my application and operation System to SSD? How about using the installation disc and directly install to the SSD? I am confused. What do you suggest? Please help
    My system:
    Macpro early 2008 (3.1)
    OS 10.6.8
    SSD is samsung 840 series 256 GB... (Since My macpro dont use SATA 3, I didnt see any reason to invest more money and buy 840 pro series or 830 series)

    Hi, There are any number of different ways to move the data from one drive to another. My preference (the last one) would be to do a clean fresh install using system disks because of the way SSD drive's lay down data.
    I'm not going to go into detail laying out HOW you do this. I assume you can do a Google (or other) engine search for details.
    1) SystemMigration - this is a built in MAC OS X utility that allows you to move system + data from one drive to another
    2)  Do a Time Machine backup of everything and then use TM to restore everything the way it is or REINSTALL a clean install of the data+new system on the replacement drive.
    3) Carbon copy Cloner is a great cloning application and can "block clone" from a smaller drive to a replacement drive of the same or larger size
    The above 3 methods assume you will transfer ALL the date, good bad & ugly, from the magnetic media to the SSD. This is the most efficient method,  but from personal experience you may end up not getting
    the faster boot up time and disk responsiveness you would expect from an SSD. I can't say why; it may have to do with the way data is initially "laid down" on the SSD OR all the extra "jetsam and flotsam" that accompanies a used system drive - "(how's THAT for non techno-geek detail).
    I have noticed that Drive clones are only as good as the source from which they are taken and that when I cloned a magnetic Lion 10.6 Drive to an SSD, there was no significant advantage in boot times with a 10.6 Lion boot taking anywhere from 45 to 60 to 75 seconds (pretty much he same for magnetic drives).
    I then did an original clean system install on the SSD as if I were doing it for the first time....updated it completely and THEN and only then did I reinstall all the apps individually followed by cloining the data files.
    By doing this, I was able to cut the boot time on that SSD (and all subsequent ssd clones of the original SDD) to 25 to 30 seconds.
    NOT BAD. Just simply cloning what you already have is a simple option, but if you're looking for optimal SSD performance, I'd opt for a fresh clean instll of everything.

  • Install Disk for Snow Leopard will not boot on an iMac 27in

    My Install Disk for Snow Leopard will not boot on my iMac 27in. The Apple Logo is the only thing the user will see. The current OS on the system is 10.6.6. Upon placing the Snow Leopard DVD in the system, the DVD players spins for a few seconds and displays the Apple Logo. Nothing happens after 20 minutes.

    Yes, it is ridiculous how it is impossible to install Snow Leopard. I have two Snow Leopard DVDs: one that I purchased for a Macbook soon after it's release (10.6.0), and one that came with my iMac (10.6.4). Both of these boot up my Macbook (running 10.6.7) just fine. My SL 10.6.0 DVD mounts onto my iMac (Lion 10.7.0), but you cannot run the install. I attempted to boot from this DVD and got the infinite white screen and Apple logo, as some have reported above. The other SL 10.6.4 DVD will not even mount in Lion, and will not even show up as a bootable drive when I attempt to select it after holding alt/option on reboot.
    I created a bootable external drive from SL 10.6.0, attempted boot, same infinite white screen/apple logo.
    I created a bootable external drive from SL 10.6.4 on my macbook. I attempted to boot from this drive, and got the white screen of death, except that this time I actually got the loading symbol underneath the Apple logo. After about a minute of attempting to boot, the Apple logo changed to a circle with a diagonal line through it (the "NO!" sign).
    I took my iMac to the genius bar. They inserted SL 10.6.0, which would not boot. Then they determined that my computer had to run 10.6.4 and later. So, they restored an image of SL 10.6.4 onto my partition (not an install from an image, but an image of SL already installed). Hurray! Snow Leopard was successfully shoved onto my iMac!
    I then deleted a third partition on my hard drive I did not need anymore, which somehow screwed up my SL partition (even though it said "Will not erase partition SL or Macintosh HD). Now I am back at square one, and I guess I need to take my flippin iMac back to Apple for them to do what I should be able to do.
    I like Apple, but sheesh do I hate Lion right now.

  • Boot problems with snow leopard running bot camp

      I have used this computer with boot camp for over a year, when I try to boot the mac drive it freezes. If I boot using the option key I can boot into windows normally.  Even using restart from yhr bootcamp menu causes a freezup if i try to boot to apple. any suggestions?

    I had this same problem -- machine would boot, but loop at two blue screens before the login window. I sshed into the machine and checked /private/var/log/system.log and /var/log/secure.log which showed a unexpected character in /etc/authorization. Basically, the authorization file was corrupted (most likely by bad RAM.) The solution was to replace this file with one copied from another machine. I didn't match models, but did match OS when copying the file (i don't know if this matters at all), and as soon as the "cp" command was entered, the login window popped up. <-- totes awesome. The machine has been reliable since (all of 15 minutes)

  • Can I dual boot Mavericks and Snow Leopard?

    Hello. I own a 2011 i5 iMac. I recently started working with some softwares that will only work properly on Snow Leopard, but I have Mavericks installed. My question is: can I create a new partition in my HD and use BootCamp to install Snow Leopard?

    If it is a Late 2011 model, then you cannot. The earlier models came with a special version of Snow Leopard on DVDs. You can install only that version of Snow Leopard. If you've lost those discs, then you are out of luck.
    You do not use Boot Camp for this. Rather, you will use Disk Utility.
    To resize the drive do the following:
    1. Restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the COMMAND and R keys until the menu screen appears. Alternatively, restart the computer and after the chime press and hold down the OPTION key until the boot manager screen appears. Select the Recovery HD and click on the downward pointing arrow button.
    After the main menu appears select Disk Utility and click on the Continue button. Select the hard drive's main entry then click on the Partition tab in the DU main window.
    2. You should see the graphical sizing window showing the existing partitions. A portion may appear as a blue rectangle representing the used space on a partition.
    3. In the lower right corner of the sizing rectangle for each partition is a resizing gadget. Select it with the mouse and move the bottom of the rectangle upwards until you have reduced the existing partition enough to create the desired new volume's size. The space below the resized partition will appear gray. Click on the Apply button and wait until the process has completed.  (Note: You can only make a partition smaller in order to create new free space.)
    4. Click on the [+] button below the sizing window to add a new partition in the gray space you freed up. Give the new volume a name, if you wish, then click on the Apply button. Wait until the process has completed.
    You should now have a new volume on the drive.
    It would be wise to have a backup of your current system as resizing is not necessarily free of risk for data loss.  Your drive must have sufficient contiguous free space for this process to work.

  • Getting ready for Snow Leopard + Windows 7... help?

    I have a currently 300g Hard Drive in my early 2008 MacPro (with 50g free), and really want to go to a dual-boot w/ Snow Leopard and Windows 7 here in a few months.
    I have another internal drive that's 750g, and I'm thinking of using that one as my startup drive. That way (obviously) I can partition it and have more room for both operating systems (2/3 Snow Leopard, 1/3 Windows)
    My question is this: What's the best way to go about this?
    Should I go ahead and partition that drive, and then copy my current system onto the 2/3rds I want to use for Snow Leopard, and then turn off my computer and swap the drives?
    Anything to "look out for" when partitioning? I've never done it before...
    After I swap the drives, I automatically start-up on the correct partition?
    Also, is 750g too big for a startup drive?
    Maybe stupid questions, but I'm really looking forward to both of these operating systems coming out, and I want to make sure I get it right!
    tia,
    e

    I actually want to put both on the 750, so I can have all the rest of my internals be 1tb each (i keep my video editing stuff on one, my audio editing on another, and my iTunes on the other).
    Just make sure you've got all that stuff backed up. Lots of people get a false sense of security, thinking "My stuff isn't on the boot drive, so it's safe," but this couldn't be further from the truth. Maybe this is unneeded advice, but just in case, I'd recommend reading my [Mac Backup Guide|http://www.reedcorner.net/thomas/guides/backups> (or some other backup reference).
    So... I just zap the 750, partition it in Disk Utility, Carbon Copy Clone my existing Startup Disk to the correct partition, and then "point" to that as my startup volume in SysPrefs? Right?
    If you're using Parallels, rather than Boot Camp, partitioning is completely unnecessary. Other than that, yes, you've got it.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Remote and Universal Dock

    Hi guys, There's been a few discussion already on the remote and universal dock. Is it difficult for Apple to enable the display of the Ipod screen to the TV-out? You can gain a huge amount of functionality on the Ipod if you can actually see where y

  • Questions regarding jsp file download from blob

    Hi developers, i'm doing jsp file download from a blob column in DB2 using struts, 1) How do i design the jsp page such that the page will show perhaps a hyperlink for me to download the file? 2) What about struts-config.xml? Do i need to modify any

  • Wifi Troubleshooting what can be done?

    I have an iMac 21' Intel and already had trouble connecting to internet i looked over the apple forums and tried some of the stuff but it made it even worse now it won't even connect to my wifi network because there is a "connection timeout" what can

  • What are the best Plug-ins for CS3?

    Im a pretty new CS3 user and also not an expert. Just an old retired guy who always liked Graphics and Type programs like Quark, PhotoShop, Illustrator, TypeStyler, etc. Have had InDesign CS3 about 2 months and LOVE it! (I currently have Illustrator

  • Premiere CS4 freezing with ATI 4850

    My system: Intel Core i7-920 Bloomfield 2.66GHz EVGA 141-BL-E757-TR LGA 1366 Intel X58 ATX X58 SLI Corsair 750W PSU 6GB DDR3 and I've upgraded from a Geforce 7800GT to an ATI XFX Radeon HD 4850. Adobe Premiere CS4 freezes after a minute or so of play