Disk utlity restore

A friend of mine got me to back up her hard drive onto an external fire wire drive awhile back in case her mac book crashed so she could get all her applications back if it did, since then it crashed and she brought it to a mac store who reformatted the mac and upgraded it to leopard or snow leopard, and i have been trying to help her restore he old applications from when she had tiger on her computer, is it even possible? the backup was created with carbon copy cloner and is bootable ( we can get the mac to run from the drive itself) whenever we have tried to use disk utility to restore we get an error, cannot validate sizes.
here is how i went about it
1. booted onto the main mac hard drive (snow leopard)
2. Opened disk utility
3. Selected the internal mac HD
4. Went to Restore tab
5. Set the LaCie harddrive as the source
6. Set a partition called "exchange" on the harddrive as the destination, this is what i had got from various guides on the internet.
If anyone could enlighten me on whats going wrong and what is possible to do in order to get as many of these programs from the drive back onto her hard drive please let me know,
thanks in advance.

There is a high likelihood that at least some if not most of
the apps that ran under Tiger may have an issue in the
newer OS X system as installed into the computer now.
There were some which were known to not work past Tiger,
and others which would require an installer to be loaded in
to an OS X correctly. So, it would be better, if one is staying
with the newer OS X the computer has in it now, to build-up
the system for that new OS.
You may be able to use a utility in Snow Leopard to make a
live partition on the computer's internal drive without messing
up that new OS; and then clone the old OS X from the outside
source (the bootable clone) back into the computer. This would
be a way to restore the content; perhaps using Disk Utility, or
using a suitable clone utility, such as Carbon Copy Cloner.
If there is no retail install disc for the newest OS X installed in
the computer by the service tech, that would be needed at a
point in time to correctly maintain the computer running that OS.
Plus, a retail install DVD supports the legal license to run OS X.
And if there is no newer Snow Leopard (or whatever it has now)
system installed, and no discs; and no concern about getting a
retail install DVD to support the new OS X version installed, an
effort to restore the computer back to Tiger 10.4.11 may be OK.
At least until such time as an upgrade over Tiger or a complete
new from scratch upgrade (and/or Migration Assistant used?)
or another idea can be implemented.
The newer OS X uses a different technology in some aspects of
how it works; and while some apps could be ran in there, you can
count on a need to upgrade to later versions, the apps that won't.
Since a MacBook (intel-based Mac) with Tiger, shipped with a
very special version of that OSX, if one reverted to 10.4, that
would have to be via the specific build series included with it.
Or the complete bootable clone made from the running system.
There probably are exacting instructions to do what you seek;
if that means to revert to the older system so those apps and
the users can be continued on in the newer OS X. To migrate
may be one of the ways; but some apps won't transition. The
documents created by older apps may, if presented to newer
versions of those same apps so they could be updated, too
when opened by the newer version of the apps.
Perhaps someone who has upgraded from Tiger to Snow
Leopard can add most of the details I don't seem to have
at this point in time, to more successfully transition to 10.6
(or whatever the newer system in the Mac is now) and
bring along the older stuff from Tiger in the clone.
The migration assistant should be one way; but not every
thing will transition over. And I am not sure how that works.
When I install a new system, I end up reinstalling everything
from scratch sooner or later; even though I have boot clones.
So, we'll see if someone can confirm the processes to do that.
Or check in the Snow Leopard Support pages to see how they
suggest migrating an old computer into a new one, as you do
have a clone equivalent of the former setup to do that from.
Looking at the time, and how many words I've added to this,
you probably have an answer before I could post my reply!
Good luck & happy computing!

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