Brand new hard drive full from backup

I just upgraded my macbook from a 320GB hard drive to 500GB and reinstalled using Time Machine. But the now the new hd is full? I used OmniSweep to see what is filled up, but it only reports 247GB of disk space being used, am I duplicating somewhere? Thanks!

Nevermind - I found it

Similar Messages

  • Brand new hard drive...what happens if I plug in my ipod?

    Hello,
    I just got a brand new hard drive for my powerbook after it completely failed...all my data is gone and I was devasted...but that's life...That includes all my music in iTunes. But I have my iPod...What will happen if I plug in my iPod to sync up. Will it completely erase my iPod because there is nothing in my iTunes, or will it transfer all my music files onto iTunes...I was scared to plug it in last night in hopes that I may be able to salvage something from my data. Any help would be great!
    Thanks,
    LH

    If your iPod is set to update automatically you'll get a message that it is linked to a different library and asking if you want to link to this one and replace all your songs etc, press "Cancel". Pressing "Erase and Sync" will irretrievably remove all the songs from your iPod. When your iPod appears in the iTunes source list change the update setting to manual, that will let you use our iPod without the risk of accidentally erasing it. Check the "manually manage music and videos" box in Summary then press the Apply button. Also when using most of the utilities listed below your iPod needs to be enabled for disc use, changing to manual update will do this by default: Managing content manually on iPod and iPhone
    Once you are safely connected there are a few things you can do to restore your iTunes from the iPod. There are a number of third party utilities that you can use to retrieve music files and playlists from your iPod. I use Senuti but have a look at the web pages and documentation for the others too, you'll find that they have varying degrees of functionality and some will transfer movies, videos, photos and games as well. This is just a small selection of what's available, you can read reviews and comparisons of some of them here:
    Wired News - Rescue Your Stranded Tunes
    Comparison of iPod managers
    Senuti Mac Only (Currently only the beta version is iPod Touch & iPhone compatible)
    PodView Mac Only
    PodWorks Mac Only
    iPodDisk PPC Mac Only (experimental version available for Intel Macs)
    TuneAid Mac only (iPhone and iPod Touch compatible)
    iPodRip Mac & Windows
    YamiPod Mac & Windows
    Music Rescue Mac & Windows
    iPod Music Liberator Mac & Windows
    iGadget Mac & Windows (iPhone and iPod Touch compatible)
    Floola Mac & Windows
    iRepo Mac & Windows (iPhone and iPod Touch compatible)
    iPod Access Mac & Windows (iPhone and iPod Touch compatible)
    TouchCopy Mac & Windows (iPhone and iPod Touch compatible)
    If you have any iTunes Music Store purchases the transfer of purchased content only from the iPod to authorised computers was introduced with iTunes 7. You'll find details in this article: Copying iTunes Store purchases from your iPod or iPhone to a computer
    There's also a manual method of copying songs from your iPod to a Mac or PC. The procedure is a bit involved and won't recover playlists but if you're interested it's available on page 2 at this link: Copying Content from your iPod to your Computer - The Definitive Guide
    Keep your iPod in manual mode until you have reloaded your iTunes and you are happy with your playlists etc then it will be safe to return it auto-sync. I would also advise that you get yourself an external hard drive and back your stuff up, relying on an iPod as your sole backup is not a good idea and external drives are comparatively inexpensive these days, you can get loads of storage for a reasonable outlay:
    Back up your iTunes library by copying to an external hard drive

  • Install to brand new Hard Drive

    13" MacBook Pro would no longer boot (2010 model). Took into the Apple store and they tell me the hard drive is fried.
    I bought a new hard drive, replaced it and held 'c' down during boot to load from the install DVD that came with the system when I bought it.
    I'm now forever stuck at the gray Apple logo with the gray swirly circle below it. Can hear the DVD spin up and down over and over - doesn't go anywhere.
    Can anyone tell me what's going on here and why I can't boot off this DVD to install the OS to this brand new hard drive?

    I have done both. When I hold down the "C" key it pauses for a few seconds while the cd spins and then the flashing folder icon appears.
    Could be you have the wrong cd/dvd.  The mac will only boot a supported cd/dvd for your machine. The flashing question mark indicdates your machine could not find a valid os.
    When I hold down the "option" key for the startup manager the cursor comes up and moves but the actually manager doesn't come up no matter how long I leave the laptop on.
    Not sure.  Could be your machine does not support the startup manager. You would think the machine would ignore the key.
    Where did you get the dvd?  What is the number on the DVD?
    What machine do you have anyway?
    This site provides more information, but lacks security.
    "A serial number is a unique, identifying number or group of numbers and letters assigned to an individual piece of hardware or software. It's used for various things depending on the product / brand but what is your Mac's serial number for and more importantly... what is it hiding and what can it do for you ?"
    http://www.appleserialnumberinfo.com/Desktop/index.php
    or
    This site provides more information, but lacks security too.
    "A serial number is a unique, identifying number or group of numbers and letters assigned to an individual piece of hardware or software. It's used for various things depending on the product / brand but what is your Mac's serial number for and more importantly... what is it hiding and what can it do for you ?"
    http://www.appleserialnumberinfo.com/Desktop/index.php
    http://www.chipmunk.nl/klantenservice/applemodel.html
        ( hint by K Shaffer  )

  • So I formatted a brand new hard drive to MAC OS (Journal), I then could save on the hard drive. Not two days later Im back at square one, the program wont recognize the hard drive again.

    So, hard to beleive, but I am having some trouble with Final Cut Pro X.
    This last week I formatted a brand new hard drive to MAC OS (Journal),
    so that I could save on that hard drive.
    Well it went great.
    I saved my project on there and copied a few others over as to free up space on my Laptop.
    Then, not two days later Im back at square one,
    the program wont recognize the hard drive.
    It wont even open the events up off my hard drive,
    as to jog the program into reqcognizing the scratch disk (which worked twice before).
    What happened?
    How do I get the program to re-recongize my newly formatted hard drive?
    Please help!

    The name of the drive, or the name of some folders inside the drive, may fool FCP X into believing it is a camera.
    Also, you should not use the drive for time machine backups.

  • Please HELP!! MacBook stuck on "Select your Keyboard" screen after installing Snow Leopard on a brand new hard drive!

    Hello, I just recently replaced my internal hard drive in my MacBook [from a 250gb to a blank/empty 750gb]. I managed to get OS X Snow Leopard installed with the DVD. Setup seems to run fine at first, I get the screen in space with the welcome message different languages while music plays. Then I'm asked to select my country, then here is my problem- the next screen asks me to "Select Your Keyboard", I select & click "Continue" button, then my Mac is just showing the spinning beachball & it stayed that way all night =( I don't know how to fix this. Anyone experience this or have any solutions for me? I'd appreciate any help! Thank you! [I've been googling since yesterday with no luck on finding an answer].

    It's diagnostic software. It's supposed to help you find problems. I don't think anyone is making any software yet that fixes hardware problems.
    That said, the two comments:
    Le husky wrote:
    Macbook pro freezes for no reason even after installing 10.8 on a brand new hard drive....
    .....also my trackpad is behaving very erraticaly sometimes, it's like it is possessed by a ghost....
    would lead me to think it's the logic board. On older MacBook Pro's both the USB I/O ports and the keyboard/trackpad are fed out of an integrated USB controller integrated into the South Bridge I/O controller. On newer models, the USB ports come out of an integrated North/South bridge controller and the keyboard/trackpad are handled by an SMC controller, which itself interfaces with the I/O controller. All of these items are on the logic board, and they're all unrepairable.
    ...unless of course the "internal drive [that] is installed in a cheap external case" is itself causing the problems. Another thing to try might be a different USB port, if you haven't done so already.
    I didn't know the price for Scannerz went up. I could have sworn I only paid 30-some bucks for it. Maybe it was on sale at the time. I don't remember.
    In any case, good luck.

  • Will a Mountain Lion install USB work with putting Mac OS on a brand new hard drive?

    My MacBook Pro's hard drive has crapped out and I'm planning on purchasing a new hard drive for it.  However, this new hard drive will be completely clean and no remnants of Mac OS will be on it when I receive it.  But before my hard drains crapped out, I made a Mountain Lion install USB like the one made here: http://osxdaily.com/2012/02/17/make-bootable-os-x-10-8-mountain-lion-usb-install -drive/ .  If I install this new hard drive into my MacBook Pro, turn the computer on, and hold down the Option key, will I then be able to install Mac OS with this USB drive?  If not, please explain the steps that I need to take in order to successfully install Mac OS onto a brand new hard drive.
    P.S. I do not have the install disc from when I bought my computer.

    You can use the USB drive you created previously to install OS X in your new hard disk. Also, you can use Internet Recovery, if you want to > http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4718
    After installing the hard disk and starting from the USB drive, follow the steps to reinstall OS X. If there isn't any partition on the hard disk, close the installer and open Disk Utility.
    Then, choose the hard disk at the top of the sidebar, go to Erase tab and erase the disk. After erasing the disk, close Disk Utility and reinstall OS X

  • Macbook pro freezes for no reason even after installing 10.8 on a brand new hard drive

    Macbook pro freezes for no reason even after installing 10.8 on a brand new hard drive.
    Tried to reset pram, smc, nvram.
    Tried installing new RAM.
    Tried installing new hard drive.
    You should know that my internal drive is installed in a cheap external case and plugged in a USB 2.0 port because i am waiting for a new hard drive cable.all
    Yep all good things happened to me...i don't know if all these problems are linked, ahh and also my trackpad is behaving very erraticaly sometimes, it's like it is possessed by a ghost. My computer is not under warranty anymore so i'd like to avoid a trip to the Apple store but i'm close to doing just that.
    Any help appreciated...

    It's diagnostic software. It's supposed to help you find problems. I don't think anyone is making any software yet that fixes hardware problems.
    That said, the two comments:
    Le husky wrote:
    Macbook pro freezes for no reason even after installing 10.8 on a brand new hard drive....
    .....also my trackpad is behaving very erraticaly sometimes, it's like it is possessed by a ghost....
    would lead me to think it's the logic board. On older MacBook Pro's both the USB I/O ports and the keyboard/trackpad are fed out of an integrated USB controller integrated into the South Bridge I/O controller. On newer models, the USB ports come out of an integrated North/South bridge controller and the keyboard/trackpad are handled by an SMC controller, which itself interfaces with the I/O controller. All of these items are on the logic board, and they're all unrepairable.
    ...unless of course the "internal drive [that] is installed in a cheap external case" is itself causing the problems. Another thing to try might be a different USB port, if you haven't done so already.
    I didn't know the price for Scannerz went up. I could have sworn I only paid 30-some bucks for it. Maybe it was on sale at the time. I don't remember.
    In any case, good luck.

  • Just got new hard drive installed from apple and my old password doesn't work and it won't let me change it

    just got new hard drive installed from apple and my old password doesn't work and it won't let me change it.cant install anything ,pls help,thx

    Camera works. Now gotta find out about this mic thing

  • Brand new Hard Drive - hp Pavilion

    running slowly and freezing ... brand new Hard Drive - hp Pavilion

    Allison, welcome to the forum.
    When requesting help you should always include the make/model (i.e. p6-xxxx) of the computer and/or monitor. This information is necessary for us to review the specifications of them.  Also, what is the make/model of the new hard drive?
    Signature:
    HP TouchPad - 1.2 GHz; 1 GB memory; 32 GB storage; WebOS/CyanogenMod 11(Kit Kat)
    HP 10 Plus; Android-Kit Kat; 1.0 GHz Allwinner A31 ARM Cortex A7 Quad Core Processor ; 2GB RAM Memory Long: 2 GB DDR3L SDRAM (1600MHz); 16GB disable eMMC 16GB v4.51
    HP Omen; i7-4710QH; 8 GB memory; 256 GB San Disk SSD; Win 8.1
    HP Photosmart 7520 AIO
    ++++++++++++++++++
    **Click the Thumbs Up+ to say 'Thanks' and the 'Accept as Solution' if I have solved your problem.**
    Intelligence is God given; Wisdom is the sum of our mistakes!
    I am not an HP employee.

  • Installing MAC OS X on a brand new hard drive

    i recently installed a brand new hard drive, and i was wondering how i install OSX on it
    do i just put in the cd or is there something i have to do?
    thanks

    it worked
    thanks
    but i actually have another problem
    a year ago (whenever the newest Mac OS came out), i upgraded the OS.
    in the middle of installing the OS, i got error messages, and i had to restart the installation a couple times before i finally got through.
    when i tried to install OS X on my new hard drive, the same error message came up.
    anyone know whats wrong with my computer?
    thanks for all your help by the way.

  • What is the best order to upgrade to Lion after putting in a brand new hard drive in my MacBook Pro? Restore first? or install Lion First?

    I  have a 2008 macbook pro with brand new 500GB hard drive and 6GB new RAM.    My old hard drive is backed up on external drive, via time machine. When the shop put in the new hard drive (there was nothing wrong with old one, it was just stuffed to the brim), they loaded snow leopard from a disk, but I haven't put anything from the old drive back on yet....I haven't even configured my mail and am just reading mail  from ipad and phone these days.
    Question: Should I install Lion before I restore all the old backed-up stuff, or is it important to have anything, ( like maybe preferences)  already on the computer when I download Lion.  I want to be selective when restoring from time machine, because my old hard drive had a lot of ancient software and junk on it that had migrated from every computer we've ever owned, and that is many, many.
    So, I'm just stuck on the best way to proceed.  Also, should I install the latest update for 10.6.8 before I download Lion? I see today that some new updates have become available; java, security, safari, and apple software installer.
    Thanks
    G.T.

    Gaye Thomas wrote:
    But I just read your next post, and  it sounds like you think I should do the back-up first, or am I missing something. I think you are now recommending that:
    1. First I should install Snow Leopard,
    2. do the combo update of 10.6.8
    3. THEN USE BACKUP to restore what I want to carry over to new drive.
    4. Then upgrade to Lion.
    I would restore SL and do the Combo 10.6.8 update. Then use your backup to load back in what you want. Then do the upgrade to Lion.
    So what made you change your mind?
    And, just to say again, the hard drive is completely new.  The shop installed 10.6.8 from the installation CD, and I haven't even configured email.  I'm only using safari.  I just now downloaded 4 updates that software updater recommended.  It now tells me it is up to date.  Is there any reason to do a 10.6.8 combo updater?
    Are you recommending to do the back up BEFORE I install Lion, so that there are some preferences and information about old passwords and certain information that Lion will want to know about?  Will it make my life easier to back up BEFORE I install Lion?
    What changed my mind was your second post. You don't want to carry over everything to the new drive and the install of Lion. You only want selective things and of course your personal files.
    For that I "feel" it best to install SL, Update SL to the most current version, Then selectively restore the parts you want and then install Lion on top of that newest install of SL with the selectively restored parts on the new Hard drive.
    That should give you as clean an upgrade as you can get.
    Of course you could go a completely different route. Make the Lion install USB, Save all your program Install files you want to be installed in Lion along with your personal files. Then Wipe the drive and install Lion clean. Then RE-Install your programs and copy over your personal files.
    That is what I would do as I do not like upgrading to a new OS over the top of an older one. I have never found that to be as clean and it always seems to carry over stuff from the older OS to the new one. But that is me.

  • Install new hard drive, restore from Time Machine, File Vault Problems

    Hello all,
    I spent way too much time on this seemingly simple task, so I thought I would share my experience with others so they can avoid some pitfalls when upgrading a hard drive in a system that uses File Vault 2 encryption. The basic goal here is to replace a drive in a system that has only one drive, and the OS is Mavericks, and then have the new drive encrypted as before.
    The problem is that a Time Machine restore onto a new drive will leave that without a Recovery Partition, which is required for File Vault 2 and some other important things. So we need to build a recovery partition. There are possibly several ways to do this.
    Here's what worked for me (this is compiled from many sources that I found and already closed the tabs in my browser so I can't list all my sources):
    1) Make a full backup to an external hard drive using Time Machine.
    2) Go into the App Store and download OS X Mavericks but dont install it (close the window when it pops up asking to continue the install). Do this even if you already have Mavericks. At this point, there will be a folder in your Applications folder called Install OS X Mavericks (or similar).
    3) Insert a USB drive that is at least 8 GB and format it using Disk Utility, naming it the default "Untitled".
    4) Open a terminal and type
    sudo /Applications/Install\ OS\ X\ Mavericks.app/Contents/Resources/createinstallmedia --volume /Volumes/Untitled --applicationpath /Applications/Install\ OS\ X\ Mavericks.app --nointeraction
    5) Wait for this to finish (took me about 30 min). Eject the USB drive and power down.
    6) Remove the old hard drive and set it aside. Keep it for a few weeks until you know the new drive is working as expected.
    7) Install the new hard drive and insert the USB drive. Hold the option key and press the power button. Choose to boot from the USB installer.
    8) Use the disk utility to erase whatever partition shipped with the new drive, replacing it with a Mac OS Extended (Journaled) system. Verify that GUID is the partition type (in Advanced options).
    9) Close the disk utility and install Mavericks. This can take a long time. My new drive is an SSD, and it sat at the "1 second remaining" part for about 20 min. Let it reboot (maybe it was 2 times?) and go through the setup until it finishes the install.
    10) Boot into the freshly installed OS and open a terminal and type:
    diskutil list
    11) If there is a partition listed as Apple_Boot Recovery HD (mine was 650 MB), then you now have a recovery partition. If not, then go into the App store and download Mavericks, but don't use the USB this time, choose to do a regular install (or reinstall to be more correct).
    12) Now there will be a recovery partition on the new drive and Time Machine will not overwrite it when restoring. Power down the system.
    13) Plug in the Time Machine backup drive used in step 1. Press the option key and power on. Choose to boot from the recovery partiton (Mavericks).
    14) Choose to restore from Time Machine backup. Wait until it finishes and log into the old familiar account.
    15) Start a terminal and verify the recovery partition is still there (type diskutil list and see that the Apple_Boot Recovery HD is there). If it's missing, choose to download Mavericks from the App Store again and run the installation from this one.
    16) Once there is a Mavericks recovery partition on the restored data you can simply turn on File Vault from the System Preferences Security section. It will require a reboot and then you login and wait for it to finish.
    What a major pain to go through all of this for the sake of upgrading a hard drive. This should not be anywhere near as complicated. I hope this helps others avoid the very time consuming trial and error I went through in developing this procedure.

    Talked with Apple last night. Everything we did to restore lost images failed to fix the issue. I did have the images still on my camera's SD card so I was not breaking out in a cold sweat.
    All Time Machine backups showed the same issue. HOWEVER, I suddenly remembered I also had a SuperDuper backup and voila. The images were there.
    Moral of the story: you can't ever be too rich or have too many backups (I also have an offsite backup).

  • Mavericks will not install on brand new Hard Drive

    Trying to install Mavericks to a brand new internal 2TB Samsung SATA 3.0 HD on a 3-yr old 12 Core Mac Pro system that was running Mnt Lion just fine. After multiple failures upgrading the Mnt Lion disk to Mavericks. Decided to just use a brand spankin' new hard drive and do a clean install of Mavericks. Now during the install to the NEW DRIVE, getting error message "Mavericks cannot be installed." Then I reboot and try to force the continuation of the install, doing this repeatedly, and I sometimes get a error log instead of a just an error message. Error log says: Thread 34 Crashed:: Dispatch queue: com.apple.root.high-priority.  Then the 1st line listed under that is: 0 libsystem_platform.dylib  0x000000010fa5a06a _platform_memmove$VARIANT$Nehalem + 138. If anybody knows what any of that means?
    Thanks.

    Without the full listing of the trace I can't be sure, however it would look more like a bonafide logic board or memory error rather than the HD that's causing  the problem. The low level drivers on Mavericks have obviously changed (otherwise it wouldn't be a different OS version) and possibly they're exposing a lack of performance in your memory. The actual Mavericks install may not be the problem, but rather being corrupted during installation. In the line you quoted, Nehalem is the Intel name for your CPU, the memmove operation failed (move blocks of memory contents from point A to point B) and they shared library containing this was in the system library....sort of critical stuff.
    You could try the following:
    Re-seat the RAM and try again.
    Try an old OS installation and see if it succeeds (Snow Leopard, Lion, Mountain Lion, etc)
    Try an install to an external enclosure
    If re-seating the RAM does the trick, then you're set.
    If it doesn't, then install an older OS to see if they work OK. If older OSes work OK using the internal drive and you have after market memory in the system, it would imply to me that the memory probably isn't quite up to snuff and Mavericks is exposing it. If it's original memory then it should be OK.
    If the older OSes now don't install correctly and it's giving similar problems try doing the install in an external enclosure. The point here being to try to move your data path off the internal SATA cable. If these install OK, try it with Mavericks. If any of these work it could be the SATA cable or I/O controllers on the logic board (SATA cable most likely).  A good reference for these sorts of problems is:
    Bad Hard Drive Signs and Symptoms
    Possibly a last option, which I would think (or hope) would be rare, would be that the binary for Mavericks install got corrupt during download. You could also try some of the resets they have in the linked document above. They might work and it doesn't take any effort.
    Good Luck

  • Trying to Restore new hard drive via TC backup

    I purchased a new Seagate 750GB hard drive to replace the 500GB hard drive which only had 19GB of free space available.  I installed the new hard drive in my MBP 17" and here is where I am unsure if what I did was correct.
    I inserted the original MAC OS X Install DVD (v. 10.5.7).  4 months ago I upgraded to v 10.6.8 but for some reason I cannot locate the disk so I inserted the orignal that with my MBP.  I should say that I back up my MBP to my TC wirelessly but my initial backup of the entire hard drive was originally completed via CAT5 connection.
    After I inserted the original install DVD I chose the option in Disk Utility to Restore From Backup.  I went through the back up process overnight and this morning the restore was completed.  I click on the button command to reboot the computer and it began the process of rebooting.
    Upon rebooting a blank screen popped up with several lines of data (data looked like it was in DOS form) and the a box with a message that said "Your computer must be restarted).  It had this message displayed in several languages.
    If someone can help me with the following I would be very appreciative.
    1.  Direct me to the procedure for restoring my MBP using the most recent back up on my TC.
    2.  How do I override the message on my MBP that says I need to restart my computer.  I restart it and the message keeps popping up.

    In your Applicaiton's > Utilities folder is a program called Disk Utility.
    It manages and repairs drives, sets up partitions, erases drives and partitions, changes drive formats and other things, like repairing disks and permissions.
    "Permissions" are per file codes that prevent other programs from reading and/or writing and/or changing the data the file contains. If a program doesn't have permissions to access a file it can't do anything harmful.
    It's this permisisons based operating system that gives OS X's "Unix" such excellent security protection.
    When a clone occurs, or even a Software Update (under the Apple Menu), you give the program your admin password, which allows it to make permission file changes. Or how else can it clone the whole drive or update the operating system right?
    It's these changes that likely need to be changed back to their original settings as a double check just to make sure.
    Before you go seriously changing things around in Disk Utility, make sure you know what your doing.
    Erasing of data can occur there, but not to your boot drive while booted from it as it won't allow it.
    However while booted from the 500GB drive, you do want to erase and reformat the new 750GB drive and rid yourself of the 10.5 install you did there as it's useless (grab a copy of any files you made there first)
    https://support.apple.com/kb/ht1782

  • Using Time Machine to restore to new hard drive missing recent backups

    On Mac Book Pro 2009 with OS X 10.5.8.
    I have been backing up to Time Machine on an external drive since 2009. A few month ago I upgrade to OS X 10.9 Mavericks.
    Trying to install a new hard drive and restoring from Time Machine. Just before installing the hard drive I again backed up to Time Machine.
    Trying to restore from Time Machine.
    Note: this link shows the screen I am on. It isn't from my computer. Just showing for display purpose.
    http://www.imore.com/sites/imore.com/files/styles/xlarge/public/field/image/2014 /03/time_machine_select_backup.jpg?itok=G2WbV0Vu
    "Select a backup. Select the Time Machine backup you want to restore. Only complete backups of Mac OS X appear in the list"
    The problem is, the most recent "complete" restore point in the list is August 2011 (OS X 10.5.8). How can that be? Over the years I have checked Time Machine and I have back ups way past 2011.
    What should I do?
    Thanks

    Daniel Greeney wrote:
    So I just purchased an internal drive (separate from my system drive) to use as a Time Machine drive, for both of my computers (only one partition). Since they will be backing up every day, I will retain much more recent material in case of drive failure.
    Let Time Machine back up every hour, as it's designed. That will protect you best.
    My question is this - if I have a drive failure on my current internal system drive, and the internal Time Machine is intact, is it possible for me to take my external bootable backup (say 3 weeks older than Time Machine in how recently it was backed up), make a cone of that on a new internal system drive, and then use Time Machine to restore that drive to what is most current on Time Machine?
    Does this question make sense?
    The question makes sense until you realize that Time Machine backups contain everything you need (unless you do something silly, like exclude your system files).
    Once the new drive is installed and formatted, you can restore your entire system from the TM backups faster than you can copy the clone to the new internal HD. See #14 in the Frequently Asked Questions *User Tip,* also at the top of this forum. Note that you use the Snow Leopard Install disc only for the Installer on it; you don't install OSX from it.

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