Bootable Clone/Backup-How to?

Ever since updating to 10.4.11 a lot of strange things have started to happen on my miniG4
too numerous to get into .Like an idiot I have never backed up my system ( I don't use it for work, I'm not in school) so I think it is time to do an "erase and install".I do have lots of 3rd
party programs I would to hang on to so I'll copy them all to DVD. Here is my question: Do I need to make a bootable clone of my startup disk? I have tried to repair my HDD with fsck
disk utility an even tried AppleJack all with no success at correcting all the peccadillos that have started plaguing me.I have my apple installation DVD's but how can I do this and preserve my network prefs. etc? I have been a mac user for 8 years with no problems until recently,so I'm really inept at troubleshooting.Could someone give me a few tips on what to do here ? I would like to say that the few minor problems I've had I got answers to by reading the forums but this seems like a big thing. I welcome any and all sound advice and
Thanks,
Tim

There's no point cloning your current system because it is already corrupt. However, once you reinstall it would be a good idea to clone the new system while it's still in working order. Here's some appropriate information:
Basic Backup
Get an external Firewire drive at least equal in size to the internal hard drive and make (and maintain) a bootable clone/backup. You can make a bootable clone using the Restore option of Disk Utility. You can also make and maintain clones with good backup software. My personal recommendations are (order is not significant):
1. Retrospect Desktop (Commercial - not yet universal binary)
2. Synchronize! Pro X (Commercial)
3. Synk (Backup, Standard, or Pro)
4. Deja Vu (Shareware)
5. PsynchX 2.1.1 and RsyncX 2.1 (Freeware)
6. Carbon Copy Cloner (Freeware - 3.0 is a Universal Binary)
7. SuperDuper! (Commercial)
8. Intego Personal Backup (Commercial)
9. Data Backup (Commercial)
The following utilities can also be used for backup, but cannot create bootable clones:
1. Backup (requires a .Mac account with Apple both to get the software and to use it.)
2. Toast
3. Impression
4. arRSync
Apple's Backup is a full backup tool capable of also backing up across multiple media such as CD/DVD. However, it cannot create bootable backups. It is primarily an "archiving" utility as are the other two.
Impression and Toast are disk image based backups, only. Particularly useful if you need to backup to CD/DVD across multiple media.
Visit The XLab FAQs and read the FAQs on maintenance, optimization, virus protection, and backup and restore. Also read How to Back Up and Restore Your Files.
Although you can buy a complete FireWire drive system, you can also put one together if you are so inclined. It's relatively easy and only requires a Phillips head screwdriver (typically.) You can purchase hard drives separately. This gives you an opportunity to shop for the best prices on a hard drive of your choice. Reliable brands include Seagate, Hitachi, Western Digital, Toshiba, and Fujitsu. You can find reviews and benchmarks on many drives at Storage Review.
Enclosures for FireWire and USB are readily available. You can find only FireWire enclosures, only USB enclosures, and enclosures that feature multiple ports. I would stress getting enclosures that use the Oxford chipsets (911, 921, 922, for example.) You can find enclosures at places such as;
Cool Drives
OWC
WiebeTech
Firewire Direct
California Drives
NewEgg
All you need do is remove a case cover, mount the hard drive in the enclosure and connect the cables, then re-attach the case cover. Usually the only tool required is a small or medium Phillips screwdriver.
How to Clone Using Restore Option of Disk Utility
1. Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
2. Select the backup or destination volume from the left side list.
3. Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (journaled, if available) and click on the Erase button. This step can be skipped if the destination has already been freshly erased.
4. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
5. Select the backup or destination volume from the left side list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
6. Select the startup or source volume from the left side list and drag it to the Source entry field.
7. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
You can also clone using third-party backup software such as those I have recommended above.
Kappy's Personal Suggestions for OS X Maintenance
For disk repairs use Disk Utility. For situations DU cannot handle the best third-party utilities are: Disk Warrior; DW only fixes problems with the disk directory, but most disk problems are caused by directory corruption; Disk Warrior 4.0 is now Intel Mac compatible. TechTool Pro provides additional repair options including file repair and recovery, system diagnostics, and disk defragmentation. TechTool Pro 4.6.1 is Leopard compatible; Drive Genius is similar to TechTool Pro in terms of the various repair services provided. The current version, 1.5.1, is Intel Mac compatible.
OS X performs certain maintenance functions that are scheduled to occur on a daily, weekly, or monthly period. The maintenance scripts run in the early AM only if the computer is turned on 24/7 (no sleep.) If this isn't the case, then an excellent solution is to download and install a shareware utility such as Macaroni, JAW PseudoAnacron, or Anacron that will automate the maintenance activity regardless of whether the computer is turned off or asleep.
OS X automatically defrags files less than 20 MBs in size, so unless you have a disk full of very large files there's little need for defragmenting the hard drive. As for virus protection there are few if any such animals affecting OS X. You can protect the computer easily using the freeware Open Source virus protection software ClamXAV. Personally I would avoid most commercial anti-virus software because of their potential for causing problems.
I would also recommend downloading the shareware utility TinkerTool System that you can use for periodic maintenance such as removing old logfiles and archives, clearing caches, etc.
For emergency repairs install the freeware utility Applejack. If you cannot start up in OS X, you may be able to start in single-user mode from which you can run Applejack to do a whole set of repair and maintenance routines from the commandline. Note that presently AppleJack is not compatible with Leopard.
When you install any new system software or updates be sure to repair the hard drive and permissions beforehand. I also recommend booting into safe mode before doing system software updates.
Get an external Firewire drive at least equal in size to the internal hard drive and make (and maintain) a bootable clone/backup. You can make a bootable clone using the Restore option of Disk Utility. You can also make and maintain clones with good backup software. My personal recommendations are (order is not significant):
1. Retrospect Desktop (Commercial - not yet universal binary)
2. Synchronize! Pro X (Commercial)
3. Synk (Backup, Standard, or Pro)
4. Deja Vu (Shareware)
5. PsynchX 2.1.1 and RsyncX 2.1 (Freeware)
6. Carbon Copy Cloner (Freeware - 3.0 is a Universal Binary)
7. SuperDuper! (Commercial)
8. Data Backup (Commercial)
The following utilities can also be used for backup, but cannot create bootable clones:
1. Backup (requires a .Mac account with Apple both to get the software and to use it.)
2. Toast
3. Impression
4. arRSync
Apple's Backup is a full backup tool capable of also backing up across multiple media such as CD/DVD. However, it cannot create bootable backups. It is primarily an "archiving" utility as are the other two.
Impression and Toast are disk image based backups, only. Particularly useful if you need to backup to CD/DVD across multiple media.
Visit The XLab FAQs and read the FAQs on maintenance, optimization, virus protection, and backup and restore.
Additional suggestions will be found in Mac Maintenance Quick Assist.
Referenced software can be found at www.versiontracker.com and www.macupdate.com.

Similar Messages

  • Making a bootable clone

    What is a bootable clone and how do you make one?

    A bootable clone is a copy of your Internal Hard Drive onto an External Hard Drive that is full bootable. I use > Carbon Copy Cloner and others use > SuperDuper!
    For more on backing up and cloning,
    see > About Time Machine Time Machine vs. Clones and Archives
    and > My backup plan: Dan Frakes | Macworld

  • How do I make a bootable clone (with Lion already installed on my Mac)?

    Hi all, I'm hoping someone can help clarify with a step-by-step on this.  Here's the deal: I have a 2008 MacBook Pro, which I updated from Snow Leopard to Lion via the App Store.  I have decided to upgrade my internal hard drive (which I've done before) from a 500GB to 750GB, but after doing a couple hours of research, the whole Lion element is making me nervous. 
    I've been reading about the whole Lion Recovery partition, which won't be brought over with a simple cloning process (via SuperDuper! or the like) and I'm now thoroughly confused with how to do this the proper way.  I don't know if I need to use the Recovery Disk Assistant app on the new 750GB hard drive, or on a separate (third) drive, or to make a bootable Lion install disk on either, or even if I do do these things, how this meshes on the new drive, and do I need to format the new drive with two partitions for the Recovery partition to be a part of it?... Oy.
    I'd really be appreciative if someone with the know-how of this process could help with the steps.  It doesn't need to be crazy thorough--as I said, I've at least replaced my drive before--but I'm not an expert by any stretch (as a point of reference: bring up Terminal and my eyes will roll back in my head).  I just need to know what to do in what order, with at least a little detail.  And if it means anything to you, I'm the type of guy who likes to know WHY I'm doing something, if possible...  Thanks in advance for your time and help.
    (I've already got the new 750GB drive in hand, an external enclosure and a separate 8GB+ drive, too.)

    You can use 3rd party software such as Carbon Copy Cloner or SuperDuper! to create a bootable clone on an external drive.
    I use SuperDuper to create a clone. Yes, it's true the Recovery HD will need to be recreated after restoring a clone because neither of these softwares nor Time Machine backup that partition. It's really no big deal. You just reinstall Lion on top of itself after the restore and reapply any Software Updates including the 10.7.1 update. I've done this a few times with no issues.
    The Lion Recovery Assistant app creates an external Recovery HD on like a USB thumb drive, but it creates this using the Recovery HD from your Lion install. If the Recovery HD is missing, the app will not create one for you.
    EDITED:
    Create your bootable clone on an external drive.
    Create an external USB thumb drive with the Recovery HD using the Lion Recovery Assistant.
    Swap out hard drives.
    Boot from the USB Recovery HD thumb drive.
    Use Disk Utilities to create a new partition (Macintosh HD), format it with the GUID partition table and Mac OS Extended (Journaled).
    While in Disk Utilities, click your hard drive (not the new partition); then click the Restore button.
    The Source of your restore is the external clone you created. The Destination is the newly created Macintosh HD partition.
    Click the Restore button. The restore will take awhile depending on the size of the clone.
    After the restore, boot your system and it should boot into Lion.
    Reinstall Lion on top of itself to recreate the Recovery HD at the end of your Lion partition.
    Reapply Software Updates including the 10.7.1 update (if you want it).
    Hope this helps!

  • How do I install the Leopard OS from a clone backup?

    I just bought a WD 160GB My Passport Essential (USB) external hard drive.
    My goal is to partition the external hard drive so it holds the following:
    1. clone of the Leopard OS disks
    2. Leopard OS installed from the clone
    3. Time Machine backups
    I formatted the external hard drive to a HFS extended (journaled) format and created 3 partitions, each as a GUID disk.
    My Macbook is intel based and came with 2 Leopard OS install disks (Macbook OS X Install Disk 1 and Macbook OS X Install Disk 2).
    I was able to create a clone of the 2 install disks and restored both images onto the external hard drive partition I named "Leopard OS Disk Clone."
    I rebooted my back so it boot from the "Leopard OS Disk Clone" partition located on my external hard drive, to test the clone out. I clicked on the "Install Mac OS and Bundled Software" file on the "Leopard OS Disk Clone" partition and started to install the OS on the "Leopard OS" partition on the external hard drive.
    During the installation a message appeared instructing me to put the Mac OS Install Disk 2 into the mac.
    My problem is Install Disk 2 is on the "Leopard OS Disk Clone" partition and there is no way to tell the installer program the location of disk 2.
    How do I install the Leopard OS on my external hard drive partition if both Install Disk 1 and Install Disk 2 are on my "Leopard OS Disk Clone" partition?
    Thanks in advance for your help!

    I'm no expert, but I don't think you can do that.
    Everything I've done (not a whole lot) and read here says you make a bootable clone from a running system (usually your internal HD).
    You can then boot directly from the clone, either by changing the Startup Disk in System Preferences, or by holding a particular key (I forget which one just now) while powering-up, to get the option of booting from any connected bootable volume found.
    Hopefully one of the experts will confirm or deny (I'd like to know for sure, too!).

  • What exactly should I clone/ backup for a bootable functional external HD?

    I want to do two things with an external hard drive: 1) in one partition, clone the system & applications part of my computer; 2) in the other partition, keep my NORMALLY USED iTunes Library plus backups of documents and whatever else.
    The question:
    **what should I actually clone to the first partition?**
    Will it work if I just clone the Applications and System folders? Within that partition, I just want the working parts of the system--Tiger and all my applications--and I want that as a bootable clone, but without all the disk-devouring music and photo libraries. (Those are backed up elsewhere.)
    If one day my laptop's HD dies (again!), I want to just plug in the external HD, clone that first partition over, and see everything ready to use, but without the data. Will that work?
    (Background: laptop HD is 80GB and uncomfortably full, mainly because of a 30GB+ music library; external LaCie HD is 80GB. I don't want to clone the complete HD because I want to use the LaCie to boost my functional HD space. Yeah, I should have bought a bigger external HD, oh well.)
    It suddenly occurs to me it's rather pathetic to be writing this on Christmas Day. Oh well. It's not much of an occasion in Taiwan.

    Oops... I was totally wrong about what the Library actually is. I thought it contained stuff that's actually within "Users".
    SuperDuper is definitely what I wanted. I was having problems because I was trying to make a "bottom-up" collection of files: compiling all the relevant material, and that leads to all kinds of hidden files and stuff that I don't know to add. SuperDuper does it in a top down way: I can select a script to copy everything, and then adjust the script so the Picture folder is NOT copied. Problem solved, I think. (One page in the SuperDuper manual explains how to do this, but unfortunately my first scan of the manual missed that section!)
    I've tried booting from the Picture/Movie/Music less external HD partition, and it works exactly as I wanted: the system's there but there are none of the memory-hogging collections.
    Extra bonus is that I've now set this script up to clone the System and Applications components every two weeks.
    Note that you CANNOT tailor things this way with the free version of SuperDuper; you have to pay for the license.
    What I've got now: 80GB external HD has a 30GB partition with everything cloned (twice a month) EXCEPT for the Pictures, Movies, and Music folders. A 45GB partition currently has the music library (at about 30GB) and will probably collect other backups. And my laptop hard drive (nonpartitioned) now has 40GB of free space, to which in a few days (once I'm sure everything's working smoothly) I'll add about 10GB worth of burnt photo libraries.
    I'm still a bit confused about "System" terminology: the System Folder with the OS, vs the System Disk, which I suppose is everything all together. However, that doesn't really matter now.
    Thanks for everyone's help.

  • How long do I need to keep my bootable clone?

    I successfully upgraded my OS from Tiger to Snow Leopard almost a year ago. I had created a bootable clone as backup, which is stored on my external hard drive. I am running out of room on my external HD so I am wondering if it is OK to delete the bootable clone of my Tiger OS to make more space. I've run Snow Leopard for almost a year without any problems. I'd appreciate any advice. Thank you!

    Any bootable clone needs to be kept until you have a more recent backup that you can rely on. Since it's been so long for the one you're talking about, I sure hope you've got a more recent backup by now...
    jbresnic wrote:
    Great I will do that. One questions - does my Time Machine backup count as a bootable clone? Thanks!
    You can't boot a Time Machine clone, but you can easily reconstruct a bootable clone from it if you have a little more time. By inserting your OS X system disc and telling it to restore from Time Machine backup, it will reassemble one drive that is bootable from whichever Time Machine state you choose. I've done it, and it works, but I still maintain both a Time Machine backup and a bootable clone.

  • I need help transferring Bootcamp (Windows XP) from my old Macbook Pro to the new one. How do I make bootable clone of Bootcamp?

    Hi I just got a new MacBook Pro I need help transferring Bootcamp (Windows XP) from my old Macbook Pro to my new Macbook Pro  Mac OS X 10.7.4  2.6 Ghz Intel Core 17. How do I make bootable clone of Bootcamp?

    you can't just move XP even if you took the hard drive and have Windows boot and function.
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    Time to get a supported OS. Don't want to pay, then use 8 for the time until it goes on sale.
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  • How to full HDD clone (backup)?

    Hi,
    Any idea how to easy full clone (backup) 1:1 the same size hdd with sda1, sda2, sda3, sda4 (home folder dm-crypt and LUKS encrypted)?
    I just would like to keep full system with all documents on spare hdd in any hardware failure...
    Regards,
    Slav

    arokh wrote:You can achieve the same thing by doing an rsync or tar backup as well, and it should be tons faster than dd.
    I was using rsync (via rsnapshot). I was disappointed at how much time it took to make a backup, although I admit, there's a possibility I was doing something wrong. Eventually I decided that if it's gonna take that long anyway, I might as well just copy everything.
    Plus, there are reasons why many of my files change very frequently, which would make an incremental backup less convenient:
    Arch Linux is rolling release, which means the operating system files often change.
    I have three other operating systems installed that either get updated or just reinstalled.
    I rearrange my personal files kind of frequently (for example, moving 8 GB from "Downloads" to "Movies")
    Plus plus, I have partitions that don't even have read-write capabilities in Arch Linux (UFS for FreeBSD, BeFS for Haiku), although it sure would be convenient to me for someone to prove me wrong in that regard.
    So, for someone with a "complicated" configuration, like tho OP, I think a dd command would be quite suitable.
    Just partition the backup drive the same way, mount it all under /mnt and find a backup tutorial in the wiki to make your own script. Remember to install a bootloader on the backup drive as well.
    You prefix all that with the word "just", but it really sounds a lot more complicated than my one dd command... I don't even have to test my backup. I tested it the first time (I was able to boot from my backup, everything worked fine), and now I just look for errors from the dd command. If the original works, then the backup works.

  • Trying to make a clone backup of my internal HD but my iMac no longer recognizes my external HD.

    Short story: I am trying to make a clone of my internal drive using Super Duper! but the 3 TB La Cie external hard drive I want to copy to isn't being recognized by finder or in disk utility. The external hard drive is powered and attached to the desktop via firewire cable. It was properly formatted and made one seemingly successful backup prior to this attempt.
    Specs: I have a 27 in iMac with 2 GHz Intel Core i7 processor, purchased in late 2009. Running Mac OS 10.6.8 with 8GB RAM.  I have a 2 TB internal HD with only 80 GB available.
    Background: I've had few if any problems with this computer but I'm running out of disc space. It's getting a little sluggish and I find that I am force quitting iPhoto more often than I used to. I was getting ready to put a long overdue (less labor intensive) backup plan in place. I had been using DVDs to back up photos and some documents. My computer crashed last week while working in iPhoto. The screen was speckled and banded and I could not restart.  I was able to boot in safe mode and run disk utility. The verification stopped (corrupted files found) and disk utility recommended repair.  I did a safe mode back up with time machine to the 3 TB ext HD. I tried unsuccessfully to run safe mode with networking to attempt online backup with Crashplan. I read something about installing mac os x on ext HD and then dragging files over to it, but DVD player not functional in safe mode. Then I called Apple support to run what I had done by them and to ask for advice before running disk repair.  We tried a PRAM reset but still couldn't restart in normal mode. He said my safe mode backup should be good and to run the repair, restore if necessary and if that doesn't work bring it to Apple for hardware testing.  I read somewhere that PRAM resets need to be done with a USB (not wireless) keyboard so I tried again doing a few PRAM/NVRAM resets.  No change. Later, maybe even the next day, the screen which had been banded and speckled looked normal again. Not sure why but happy.  I restarted successfully. I ran a time machine backup in normal mode to a 5 TB external HD and wanted to make a bootable clone of my mac HD to the 3 TB ext HD (in place of the safe mode backup). The computer crashed again for a little while and I was eventually able to restart. I downloaded Super Duper! but my mac no longer sees the 3 TB external drive. Maybe I did something wrong when I changed drives in time machine for the last backup?  I'm guessing I could crash again at any moment and would love to get this clone made.

    Yes. Formatted correctly. It' s new ext HD and I made a the first back up on it a few days ago using time machine while my computer was in safe mode. When I was able to restart my computer normally I quickly set up a time machine backup to my larger 5 TB ext drive. Also new and formatted for my mac. I was in a rush to get it going before I left for work so maybe I did something wrong. IDK. I can't remember but it did ask me about switching drives vs setting up. Although I don't see why the computer wouldn't see the drive.
    I did try another firewire cable and no change. Checked connections again.  The HD turns on and the blue light comes on  (it's a La Cie d2 quadra deskdrive)
    Is the SMC reset where you detach devices and restart?  My printer, keyboard and mouse are all wireless and right now I don't have anything else connected.
    I'll try another PRAM reset too.
    *  Question:
    When I connect the 3 TB drive it starts up but I don't see it on my desktop, finder sidebar or in disk utility. If a hard drive starts up but doesn't show up on your computer how do you safely shut it down before disconnecting?  I've been clicking on the desktop and then pressing the eject button on my keyboard just in case.

  • 25GB of not-visible files on bootdisk after backup-how to find and delete?

    After backing up my iMac G5 internal HD to an external Firewire HD, the internal HD has accumulated an extra 25 Gigabytes of hidden/invisible files.
    ** How can I locate and delete presumably unnecessary hidden files?
    iMac HD had 100GB used. I used Carbon Copy Cloner to clone iMacHD to iMac backup, which had been zeroed with Disk Utility. After several failed partial clones using CCC, I erased iMac Backup -without zeroing- MacOS Extended (not journaled), and successfully made a bootable clone, excluding only .Spotlight-V100
    Did the failed clone attempts create hidden temporary files? Each time I tried, I would get more folders cloned, including the files at which it had hung, without error messages (mostly).
    Visible folders total 95 GB -exactly the same on Imac HD and iMac backup
    Using
    sudo ls alh /.Spotlight-V100
    .Spotlight-V100 totals 185 MB on IMac HD
    Just before the above history, iMac HD had been zeroed, Tiger reinstalled, updates taken, and other data restored using Migration assistant, from iMac Backup, which had been the boot disk because iMacHD had twice, in the last 6 months, developed bad disk sectors ( invalid leaf count in Disk Utility, surface scan errors in Techtool Deluxe. iMac HD has just passed both those tests, for now.)
    If this happens again, Applecare promised me I get a new HD.
    (Applecare Australia works the same hours I do M-F, so I get to talk to them only on Saturdays)
    IMac G5, MacBook, iMac 233 (R.I.P.)   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

    Wrong forum. You should be visiting the CCC Troubleshooting forum, wherein you'll find the solution Remove FALSE clone.
    G4 450 MP Gigabit Mac OS X (10.4.8)

  • TM backup - How large would you set the partition for a 105gb HD?

    I'm preparing to upgrade from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion and am making a TM backup to a 1TB external harddrive that has 500gb free, using Disk Utility to create a new partition.
    The size of the hard drive to backup is 105gb with 22gb remaining. How much should I partition for TM? I was thinking 150gb - is that too generous?
    I intend to keep the backup just in case I want to roll back to Snow Leopard in case anything catastrophic happens during the ML upgrade.
    Thanks in advance.

    Alternative: partition the disk with 110GB for the backup,
    use DiskUtility to format this partition as MacOSextended(journalled) option: GuidPartitionTable;
    download CarbonCopyCloner or SuperDuper and use that to make a real (bootable) clone onto this partition.
    Test it by restarting while holding the Alt(option) key and choose the newly made clone to restart from.
    Use this clone to restore when you want to go back.

  • Is a bootable clone necessary before upgrading to Lion (also Parallels 6)?

    I'm thinking about upgrading to Lion on the MBP and the MacPro where I am running Parallels 6 with Windows 7.
    Two questions:
    1. How bad of an idea is it to do this without running a backup that includes a full bootable clone? I have a full backup of the machines but I think (?) someone advised doing a bootable clone before doing this upgrade. Not sure but wondering if anyone has any good advice on this. I guess the need for the bootable clone (assuming I am moving to Lion) would be in case I need to reload all the settings and everything from the year and a half I spent getting everything to my liking (no small amount of work)? I mean, I wouldn't re-load the bootable clone and then only work off of Snow Leopard so I guess (?) I am asking if there is other info in the bootable clone that makes it different from a normal backup in such an instance.
    2. Does anyone know of any definitive documentation that tells me whether to upgrade to Parallels 7 first or if I go to Lion first for the upgrade? Does one need to go before the other?
    Thanks.
    Jon

    hotwheels 22 wrote:
     1. How bad of an idea is it to do this without running a backup that includes a full bootable clone?
    If your Lion upgrade hoses, like it usually does for those upgrading over a complicated Snow Leopard, a hold the option key bootable clone of Snow Leopard on a external drive will get you using the computer in the time it takes to boot off of it.
    It will also allow you to completely erase the internal drive and reverse clone Snow Leopard right back on.
    If you do have to erase Lion, make sure you do it via the Partiton tab, so the entire drive is erased, not just the Lion OS X Partition.
    2. Does anyone know of any definitive documentation that tells me whether to upgrade to Parallels 7 first or if I go to Lion first for the upgrade? Does one need to go before the other?
    You'll have to talk to Parallels, but if the software works with 10.6 and 10.7 then it's best to upgrade to the 10.6/10.7 version on 10.6 (make a clone first before doing anything) then checking it out well before updating the clone.
    Take your time, investigate all your software before making a leap, a clone or two will most certainly be of valuable assistance.
    Move slowly and carefully, don't do too much at once or you won't know what is causing your issues.
    Remember software like Parallels and others install kext files that can break on OS X upgrades, if you get a gray screen, simply hold Shift key and reboot to get into the machine.
    Ideally it's best to install Snow Leopard fresh, then upgrade to Lion, then install all programs then user files last, hopefully you won't have to do all that but it is the most reliable method of insuring a pristine system and upgrade free of the unknowns.
    Learn how to do clone here, formatting and other instructions too.
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/16276201#16276201

  • Bootable clones for both iMac (Intel) and G5 (PPC) on same external drive??

    Is it possible to format and partition one external firewire drive to accept a bootable clone of my iMac (Intel) on one partition and my G5 (PPC) on the other? I seem to remember that in order to be able to boot, the Intel and the PPC require something different in formatting on the drive.
    If this is not possible, could I as a second choice format/partition an external firewire drive to place a bootable clone of the G5 on one partition and a Time Machine backup of the iMac on the other? I am looking for a way to store just one rather than two drives in my safety deposit box. Thanks

    I put up instructions and a picture showing how to select the partition scheme:
    http://www.pinkmutant.com/articles/Leopard/leobugs.html
    Scroll down to about the middle of the page.
    Frankly I was surprised to find out you can boot an Intel machine from a drive that is APM rather than GUID. I'm not sure that what you want to do is going to be as easy as one would hope. Anyway, the instructions I found for dual booting off a firewire drive sounded a bit complex!
    Francine
    Francine
    Schwieder

  • Time Capsule out of space for backups - how best to proceed?

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    Cvdk,
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    Hope this clarifies things.
    Cheers!

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