Does Snow Leopard support Face Time?

Does Snow Leopard support Face Time or must i upgrade to something else? I am on a MacBook Pro Version 10.6.8 Thanks

Yes it does. See below.
http://support.apple.com/kb/ts4185

Similar Messages

  • Does Snow Leopard support AirPlay and Apple TV?

    Does Snow Leopard support AirPlay or Apple TV? I want to use my iMac superdrive to stream a DVD movie to my TV. ('07 iMac OS-X 10.6.8)

    About AirPlay and Airplay Mirroring
    AirPlay Mirroring requires a second-generation Apple TV or later, and is supported on the following Mac models: iMac (Mid 2011 or newer), Mac mini (Mid 2011 or newer), MacBook Air (Mid 2011 or newer), and MacBook Pro (Early 2011 or newer). For non-qualifying Macs you can try using Air Parrot.
    Several Apple Articles Regarding AirPlay
    Apple TV (2nd and 3rd gen)- How to use AirPlay Mirroring
    How to set up and configure AirPort Express for AirPlay and iTunes
    About AirPlay Mirroring in OS X Mountain Lion
    iTunes 10- About playing music with AirPlay
    Troubleshooting AirPlay and AirPlay Mirroring
    Using AirPlay
    Thanks to the $15 Beamer, AirPlay streaming is still possible on Macs  that do not support Airplay and mirroring.
    Other solutions are the Air Parrot, StreamToMe, and AirServer.

  • Does OS X Server 10.6 Snow Leopard support client Time-Machine backups

    Hello,
    Does OS X Server 10.6 Snow Leopard support multiple clients(20+) Time-Machine backups via LAN?
    Thanks,
    -Mike

    mausimo wrote:
    If the 20 users had 500GB hard drives and were planning on filling them, wouldn't i theoretically only need double the space to backup their computers?
    I'm not quite sure what you mean by this. If your 20 users had 500GB hard drives, then your total HD capacity would be 10,000GB, or 10TB. Double would be 20TB, which is more than I recommended. The 15TB (1.5 x the amount of data you would theoretically be backing up) would be plenty.
    That said, the DroboPro has a maximum of 16TB using currently available 2TB drives, so I would feel confident in recommending that to you. Realistically, your users probably aren't all going to fill their hard drives to capacity, so you might find you need even less.
    If I were you, I would look at how much data is on each hard drive right now, add it all up, multiply it by 1.5, then throw in an extra TB for good measure. I would only purchase enough drives to handle that capacity. As your users take up more space, you can order more drives and add them to the DroboPro.
    For example, if each user was using an average of 200GB currently, then for 20 machines you would have a total of 4,000GB, or 4TB. I would put 3x2TB drives in the DroboPro, giving you a total of 6TB (minus overhead) of backup capacity. From there, you can add more 2TB drives as you need them. This is almost identical to a system I manage for a client and it works very well.
    I hope this helps!

  • Does snow leopard support word '04

    I have a book saved on WORD '04.  Does Snow Leopard 10.6.3 allow me to rewrite and resave on Snow Leopard using WORD '04 or must I upgrade to another Word version? Can I use a plug in with WORD '04 saved documents?

    Welcome to Apple Support Communities
    Snow Leopard is compatible with Office 2004 for Mac, including Word, so you can use it. However, if you want to upgrade to a newer OS X version, you need to get Office 2008 or 2011 for Mac, because Snow Leopard is the last Mac OS X version that supports Office 2004.
    Another option you can consider is to use an application like LibreOffice, free and open-source, which is compatible with newer OS X versions and that can use Office documents. I do not recommend iWork because it does the same as LibreOffice and you have to pay to get it

  • Does Snow Leopard support more than the originally recommended 2 GB RAM?

    I have a MacBook Pro I bought in 2006 and it has 1.5 GB RAM. I know, not the best combo. So I want to upgrade it.
    Are the specs for 2GB max RAM suggested for Tiger or Leopard only?
    Would it make a difference to bump the RAM up to 4GB on my old machine now that I have Snow Leopard?

    If it's a Core Duo model the max is 2 GBs. If it's a Core 2 Duo model the max is 4 GBs but only 3 GBs will be usable so you can install 3 GBs or 4 GBs with the same net result.
    These limits are hardware determined. The OS does not affect it in any way.

  • Does Snow Leopard support MacBook Pro 2007

    Posting this on behalf of a friend who has a 17" MacBook Pro from the late 2007 that original had 10.4 installed-- it is running Intel 2.33 GHz Core 2 Duo.
    From my readings on the web, it is said that Snow Leopard (10.6) supports MacBook Pro that is running Intel chip sets. However, she brought the Pro to some Apple store and the staff says that she cannot install 10.6 on her Pro and can only upgrade to 10.5.
    Can anyone confirm this? (and know the reason why?)

    Ian Parkinson wrote:
    Legally you DO need Leopard as SL is an update to Leopard.
    No, it is not. There are three Snow Leopard licenses. The single user, the family pack, and the discounted update for people who bought a Mac shortly before SL release. It was something like $10. That is the discounted price for the upgrade version.
    The 10.5 only purchase price is reduced, but the pack with iLife includes a full price version.
    The SL price is "reduced" over previous OS releases because it doesn't offer anything strikingly new from Leopard. It was essentially a rewrite of the Leopard code to make most of the apps 64-bit.
    Upgrading from Mac OS X v10.5 Leopard.
    If your Intel-based Mac is running Mac OS X v10.5 Leopard, just purchase Mac OS X v10.6.3 Snow Leopard and follow the simple installation instructions.
    Upgrading from Mac OS X v10.4 Tiger.
    If your Intel-based Mac is running Mac OS X v10.4 Tiger, purchase the Mac Box Set, which is a single, affordable package that includes Mac OS X v10.6.3 Snow Leopard; iLife, with the latest versions of iPhoto, iMovie, GarageBand, iWeb, and iDVD; and iWork, Apple’s productivity suite for home and office including Pages, Numbers, and Keynote.
    That is a marketing campaign suggesting a good method to move from Tiger to Snow Leopard and get the current iLife apps.
    [The Software License Agreement|http://images.apple.com/legal/sla/docs/macosx106.pdf] is specific to the type of purchase you make and what license you have. If you buy a single-user license of Snow Leopard, you can use it on one apple branded computer--no requirement for having Leopard installed or purchased previously.
    If you buy a family pack license, you can install it on up to five Apple branded computers. Again, no requirement to have Leopard installed or otherwise.
    If you buy a Upgrade for Mac OS X Leopard, you can install it on an Apple branded computer that has Leopard installed.
    Those three licenses correspond to the three ways Snow Leopard is sold (or was in the case of the Upgrade for Mac OS X Leopard).
    If you buy a single-user license of Snow Leopard, you have a legal right to install it and use it on any one Apple branded computer (that meets the min requirements) regardless of ever owning any other version of Mac OS X.

  • Does Snow Leopard support CS4?

    A friend of mine just bought a new Macbook Pro and tried to install her CS4 (adobe creative suites 4) software and was unable to. She said that Snow Leopard didn't support CS4 ... is this true?

    I have it on iMacs and MacPros all running 10.6 ... A few crashing problems but that happens when photographers try to open 100+ jepgs in Photoshop !!! (Sometimes)

  • Does Snow Leopard support this MacBook? MC372 Mid 2010

    Hi,
    I'm looking to buy a refurbished Mac Book Pro.
    MC372 Mid 2010
    It has Osx 10.7 installed, I may need to install Snow Leopard on instead.
    I have a 10.6.3 DVD, will it support this version Mac Book Pro with
    an i5 processor?
    Thanks
    Mike

    If you have a Mac Pro desktop system running Snow Leopard 10.6.8 you can Clone the Macintosh HD partition to an external drive and then Boot your mac notebook from that external and then Clone the internal drive of the notebook from that external.
    The only thing I would do before starting this process is to run the 10.6.8 Combo update on the Mac Pro desktop system to make sure all the proper drivers are installed so it will run on the Mac notebook you have.
    The Combo updater loads all drivers for all model Mac computers that version of OS X can run on. The Software Update version of the 10.6.8 update only loads/installs drivers for the specific Mac computer model it is being installed on.
    You can download that Combo updater from the Apple Support Download website.
    blackwell99 wrote:
    HI,
    From DV Warehouse in LA.
    Im buying it to run Pro Tools 9, there are some issues with 10.7 and Pro Tools
    so I want to be able to hedge my bet.
    I have a 10.6.3 DVD that I use on my Mac Pro Tower.
    I noticed that Allan said that 10.6.3 won't install on that Macbook Pro

  • Does Snow Leopard support WPA2 Enterprise?

    I have a TP-Link TD-WA8910G wireless router and I want to set up my MBP to use WPA2 Enterprise as encryption method.
    The matter is that I know nothing about what a RADIUS server is and thus I'm unable to type anything in this window when it's shown:
    http://www.tyrexionibus.com/uploads/WPA2.jpg
    Can you help me? *Will I have to log into the wireless network every time I boot OS X* or has this issue been solved?
    Regards, Tyrexionibus
    Message was edited by: Tyrexionibus

    Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)
    Do you or your employer use a Radius server, if not then the question is moot
    WPA2 Personal will be fine.

  • I recently upgraded to Mavericks from Snow Leopard. Does Snow Leopard still exist on my Mac? If so, is it possible to restart under Snow Leopard in order to run PowerPC apps? If not, is there an OS available in 64 bit that supports PowerPC apps? Mav ***.

    I recently upgraded to Mavericks from Snow Leopard. Does Snow Leopard still exist on my Mac? If so, is it possible to restart under Snow Leopard in order to run PowerPC apps? If not, is there an OS available in 64 bit that supports PowerPC apps? Mav ***.

    The only reason I upgraded to Mavericks was because my Snow Leopard OS was 32 bit, which I was told would support only 4GB of RAM.
    That wasn't quite right. You can put in as much RAM as your Mac's hardware supports. The division is in the apps themselves. A 32 bit app can't use more than 4 GB or RAM. A 64 bit app can use much more.
    For example, as a 32 bit only version, Photoshop CS3 can't use more 4GB of RAM, no matter how much you actually have installed. CS4 or later can use all the RAM you want to throw at it.

  • Does OS X Snow Leopard support Exchange 2010?

    I found out that OS X Leopard doesn't support Exchange 2010 via Mail, so I was wondering if OS X Snow Leopard supports Exchange 2010 via Mail?

    Yes, OSX's Mail in SL works with Exchange 2010.  (I was running that combo before I upgraded to OSX Lion.)

  • Microsoft Office 2004 (Word) unable to save files  I have been running Office 2004 on my Intel iMac with Snow Leopard for some time and all of a sudden I cannot save a document. Word just stopped responding and I have to force quit. I can open Word and cr

    Microsoft Office 2004 (Word) unable to save files
    I have been running Office 2004 on my Intel iMac with Snow Leopard for some time and all of a sudden I cannot save a document. Word just stopped responding and I have to force quit. I can open Word and create a new document but I cannot save it. I reinstalled Word but that didn’t help. Then went to the Internet and found at least one other Mac user having the same problem which it suggests is caused by a recent Mac Security Update:
    http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/mac/forum/macoffice2004-macword/word-2004-wil l-not-open-or-save-documents/b04eb870-9b0d-4f3b-bb47-b122301e36f6
    So I check for a new Mac Security Update and sure enough there was one. I downloaded it and now Word seems to be working, as it should. I can both open and save files. The only problem remaining is that when I open Word I get the following error message “An unexpected error occurred while trying to load the Microsoft Framework library”. I contacted Apple but they were unable to help.
    How can I get rid of this error message?

    Look, I realize you might have to get your machine working, so this is how you revert back.
    Restore proceedure to pre-Security Update 2012-001 v 1.0 & v 1.1
    #1 Backup your personal data off the machine.
    Backup files off the computer (not to TimeMachine). If you don't have a external drive, get one and connect to the USB/Firewire port and simply drag and drop copy your User folder to the external drive, it will copy all your files. It's best to have two backups of your data off the machine when trying to restore.
    Disconnect all drives now to prevent any mistakes from occuring.
    #2 Reinstall OS X 10.6 from disk
    Get out your 10.6 install disk and make sure it's clean and polished (very soft cloth and a bit of rubbing alcohol, no scratches) If your disk is borked, you'll have to order a new one from Apple with your serial number.
    Hold c boot off the 10.6 disk (wired keyboard, internal optical drive), use Disk Utility First Aid to >Repair Disk  of your internal drive  (do not format or erase!!), Quit DU and simply re-install 10.6.
    Note: Simply reinstalling 10.6 version from disk (without erasing the drive) only replaces 10.6.8 with 10.6.x and bundled Apple programs, won't touch your files (backup anyway)  or most programs, unless they installed a kext file into OS X itself. (only a few on average do this)
    #3 Update to 10.6.8 without Security Update 2012-001 v1.0 or v1.1
    Reboot and log in, update to 10.6.8 via Software Update, but EXCLUDE THE Security Update 2012-001 by checkinig the details and unchecking the blue check box.
    #4 Reinstall any non-working third party programs
    When you reboot, make sure to reinstall any programs that require kext files installed into OS X, you'll know, they won't work when you launch them or hang for some reason as they are missing the part they installed into OS X.
    If for some freakish reason you get gray screen at any time when booting (possible it might occur when you reinstall older programs), hold the shift key down while booting (Safe Mode, disables kext files) and update your installed third party software so it's compatible with 10.6.8.
    https://support.apple.com/kb/TS2570
    That's it really.

  • How do i set up a new lion imac from a snow leopard imac using time machine?

    How do i set up a new lion imac from a snow leopard imac using time machine?

    Connect the two via Firewire cable - Transferring files between two computers using FireWire. Boot the old iMac into Target Disk Mode. Boot the new iMac normally.
    If you are starting the new iMac for the first time then do the above before you turn on the new iMac. After you turn on the new iMac you will begin in the Setup Assistant. When you complete the registration screens you will be offered an opportunity to migrate your data from another Mac. Follow the instructions to migrate your old Home folder, third-party applications and support files, and system preferences to the new iMac.
    If you have already gone through the Setup Assistant and created an initial admin user account, then you do the connection step but will use Migration Assistant in the Utilities folder of the new iMac.

  • Where does Snow Leopard store iTunes Music

    Greetings,
    I wanted to get a clean start for my iTunes Library.
    First, I deleted my iTunes folder in Documents into the trash and then emptied the Trash. Second, I deleted the iTunes app.
    I went to iTunes and downloaded a new iTunes application. After it was installed the entire iTunes music library was there when I opened my new download of the iTunes Application.
    Where did it come from if I deleted my iTunes folder thinking I was deleting all of my downloaded songs?
    So my question is where does Snow Leopard store these songs? I assumed they would be gone so I could begin to put in new albums in my iTunes.
    Thanks in advance for your help and support.
    Leigh

    You can find out or change where the actual songs are by opening iTunes/Preferences/Advanced (I'm still on iTunes 8 so I apologize if your menu looks different). Click my link below. The yellow highlight is mine.
    http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e311/racer27x/Public/Picture2-1.png
    Message was edited by: Frank Muller

  • Does Snow Leopard take care of cron sripts?

    Are cron scripts still relavant in Snow Leopard and if you shut down/sleep your Mac overnight, does Snow Leopard take care of them when it starts or wakes up?

    Carolyn Samit wrote:
    It must on from 3:15AM to 5:30AM not in Sleep mode.
    This is wrong and has been oft discussed before.if the computer is asleep overnight it will run the scripts when you wake it in the morning. let's not start the same old discussion again. more to the point, jeffrey is quite right that those periodic scripts are mostly useless and have been made even more so in snow leopard because rebuilding locate database was removed from the weekly script. running them by hand or installing some software to do them is a serious waste of time.
    here is a good description (by jeffrey) of what those periodic scripts do
    http://discussions.apple.com/message.jspa?messageID=8906776#8906776
    Message was edited by: V.K.

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