From tiger to leopard.. plz help me.. new imac tomorrow

so for 3 years i always used my ibook with tiger.. tomorrow my new imac will be delivered... i need any help u can give or links to previous topics regarding how to transfer everything such as settings.. emails... music.. calendar..everything..especially now that i there will be two operating systems (different) involved. thanks

Migration Assis. *****.
I've seen alot of issues when people use it. Back up all you'r info (http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=301239) you can also try (http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=58583) Firewire, But that doesn't save any preferences, Try the Migration Assis. But a backup is always best just in case.

Similar Messages

  • I cant update my OSX from Tiger to Leopard, Need Help!

    Hello and good afternoon guys. I'm on the brink of killing my Mac PPC. Here are my specs before i start to blabber:
    G5 2.7ghz Duo PPC with 2gb Ram currently running 10.4.11 OSX
    I had leopard 10.5.8 installed before but i downgraded to Tiger to fix some problem with my corrupt OS now when i try to upgrade to my 10.5.2 Leopard DVD after setup it gives me a "This software OSX cannot be installed on this computer" error.

    Hi SaintPrado, and welcome to the forums!
    At this point I think you should get Applejack...
    http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/19596
    http://www.macupdate.com/info.php/id/15667
    After installing, Reboot holding down CMD+s, (+s), then when the DOS like prompt shows, type in...
    applejack AUTO
    Then let it do all 5 of it's things.
    The 5 things it does are...
    Correct any Disk problems.
    Repair Permissions.
    Clear out Cache Files.
    Repair/check several plist files.
    Dump the VM files for a fresh start.
    At least if it doesn't fix it, it'll eliminate a few questions.
    Also, Get Temperature Monitor - 4.51 to see if it's heat related...
    http://www.versiontracker.com/dyn/moreinfo/macosx/19994
    "This software OSX cannot be installed on this computer" error.
    What color is the Disc, Gray ones are Machine Specific... what are the 2z-***-***+A numbers on it?

  • Firefox is crashing constantly for no apparent reason. Updated Firefox and Mac OS from Tiger to Leopard. Help!

    For the last few days Firefox crashes no matter what I am doing. It has crashed twice while looking at this help page. Mac OS 10.6.7

    The crashes have been fixed today. Starting with this nightly build:
    http://ftp.mozilla.org/pub/mozilla.org/firefox/nightly/2014/06/2014-06-29-08-15-12-mozilla-aurora/
    I would advise you to switch back to the release build of Firefox and not the beta or alpha (Aurora) versions of Firefox.
    I'm a nightly build tester myself and I have a separate release build installed that I can use if I run into problems with the nightly build. If you don't like the idea of having 2 types of the Firefox browser installed, please just install the release version.
    Because having the aurora Firefox as your only browser put you in a very bad situation where you were constantly crashing and frustrating yourself just to sign up on this forum. And I don't recommend the beta or aurora browser to users who just want their browser to work b/c one day they will be finding themselves fighting off mysterious/annoying bugs.
    So please take that suggestion under advisement. :)

  • I have BOTH Tiger and Leopard installed in my new iMac now .... and ...

    Yesterday I decided to take the risk - I formated my iMac's HD, made three partitions - one for Tiger, one for Leopard and another for the CS3 usage. I installed Tiger without the 1.1 upgrade but installed ALL upgrades including 1.1 and 1.3 in Leopard.
    All day today I tried different apps under Leopard including iTunes, iPhoto, Photoshop and illustrator CS3. So far so good ... haven't got any serious problem, such as sys freeze or crush, yet.
    It was actually a wonderful delight to know that I could easily access all my files from each OS without reboot.
    I love Leopard but was a bit disappointed to find out it's not as fast and stable as Tiger. I see the rainbow ball spinning quite often in Leopard (rarely see it in tiger.) The internet connection drop very often while working perfectly in Tiger. The most annoying thing is: my 5 month old Canon printer does not work under Leopard. Whenever I need to print anything I have to reboot and login to Tiger.
    Another very strange problem which occurred in Leopard really puzzled me.
    I was going to install the diver for my printer in Leopard this morning. Before I did it, I went to Disc Utility to verify and repair permissions. I read a article somewhere here that says one should do this verify and repair permission task every time BEFORE and AFTER install or upgrade anything. Although I never actually understand the concept of repairing permissions and why it's necessary to do it all the time ( can anyone kind enough to make it a bit easier to understand? ... IF the system can check and repair the error itself, why can't it do it automatically without us order the task EVRY TIME we install or upgrade anything?) , I followed the advice anyway.
    The whole process of 'verify and repair permission' took about 20 minutes. During the process it concerned me why it took so long since my Leopard is 'fresh' - newly installed in a formated partition without any 3rd party app installed. When the result came out I found myself saying ' OH MY G**!!!' ....
    Have a look:
    *There were more than 100 repaired items!!! why?* (What you see above is only part of it)
    I don't understand what ACL is and why this has happened ... Can anyone kind enough to help me understand it?)
    Thanks a lot!!

    wawalulu wrote:
    I don't understand what ACL is and why this has happened ... Can anyone kind enough to help me understand it?)
    Well, here's what Wikipedia has to say about ACLs.

  • I just upgraded my older G5 from tiger to leopard and it is now at 10.5.8, I was unaware that the new system did not support the classic envoirnment and cannot access my 6.0 version of Photoshop, which I use often...how do I get P.S. going again?

    I just upgraded my older G5 from tiger to leopard and it is now at 10.5.8, I was unaware that the new system did not support the classic envoirnment and cannot access my 6.0 version of Photoshop, which I use often...how do I get P.S. up and going again?

    Niel...
    I installed Leopard 10.5.6 and then it upgraded to 10.5.8, when I installed it I had the old info saved to a "previous systems" folder, where most of my artwork, etc. were saved, I have a one terabyte Lacie backup that unfortunately did not work as it was intended...it saved the new info and not the old. I did look into the system preferences folder and found the classic file, of course it wouldn't launch...but I have the old G 5 startup discs and will try to do it as you stated. I will try also to move it out of the previous folders file to my hard drive and see how that works.
    thank you for your time and help,
    Dennis

  • I upgraded my iBook G4 from 384MBytes to 640Mbytes and upgraded from Tiger to Leopard. After a few weeks the HDD failed. New Leopard install reports: "insufficient memory". I need Tiger install disks so I can install

    I upgraded my iBook G4 from 384MBytes to 640Mbytes and upgraded from Tiger to Leopard.
    After a few weeks the HDD failed. I bought a new disk, installed it and trued to install Leopard, but the  install fails reporting "insufficient memory".
    I assume the installation requires more memory than the OS actually needs to be able to run.
    I need Tiger install CD/DVD so I can install Tiger first and then upgrade to Leopard.

    Call Apple Customer Support 1-800-767-2775, provide the Serial Number and specifications of the Mac, and for a reasonable fee, they will supply a replacement set of system discs (if available).
    The discs will be for the original version of the OS that was pre-installed when the Mac was manufactured.
    You need much more RAM than that.
    Leopard system requirements:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/SP517

  • Help upgrading from Tiger to Leopard

    I need to upgrade from Tiger to Leopard for Quickbooks 2009; can you point me to some resources that will walk me through the process (and point out any pitfalls)? Also is the product that outfits like Amazon or Buy.com are selling what I need to do the upgrade?
    Thanks.

    Hi ramonelkalsaw;
    The only thing I would add it that while the upgrade process does claim that it will preserve things for you I would add that creating a bootable clone before starting the upgrade process is a good thing. It gives you an easy way to get back to where you were before you started very quickly just in case something goes wrong.
    Allan

  • Can't find mails anymore after update from Tiger to Leopard

    I've just updated my IMac from Tiger to Leopard (OSX 10.5.6).
    After opening the Mail program I just see the menu bar (no window for the postbox).
    When I open the postbox via the menu bar, the box is just empty. Are my mails gone? Where can I find or restore them?
    Thanks for help,
    Vanillia

    Let's force an overall reindexing via the removal of the Envelope Index. Note the special instructions when forcing the reindexing of IMAP or Exchange accounts in the following:
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?path=Mail/3.0/en/14019.html
    This will force the reindexing of all the POP mailboxes and all On My Mac mailboxes. With regard to any IMAP accounts if you have any, the practical result of this action of removing the account folder, is that with the IMAP account still set up in the Preferences, Mail will connect to the IMAP server and create a new account folder, and while doing so will index the messages in the mailbox folders of the IMAP accounts on the server.
    Keep me posted.
    Ernie

  • Hi friends i have mac ibook g4 i know its a really old model but its perfectly fine it has installed mac os x 10.5.8 ok whenever i copy and paste any thing it says no free space weather i copy from folder to desktop or from usb to mac plz help plz

    hi friends i have mac ibook g4 i know its a really old model but its perfectly fine it has installed mac os x 10.5.8 ok whenever i copy and paste anything it says no free space weather i copy from folder to desktop or from usb to mac plz help plz

    There is no download for 10.4.x or 10.5.x, there is a very slim chance you can get 10.5 by calling Apple, but usually you can only get it on eBay & such.
    Tiger Requirements...
    To use Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger, your Macintosh needs:
        * A PowerPC G3, G4, or G5 processor
        * Built-in FireWire
        * At least 256 MB of RAM (I recommend 1GB minimum)
        * DVD drive (DVD-ROM), Combo (CD-RW/DVD-ROM) or SuperDrive (DVD-R) for installation
        * At least 3 GB of free disk space; 4 GB if you install the XCode 2 Developer Tools  (I recommend 20GB minimum)
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1514
    http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=mac+os+x+tiger+retail+10.4
    See Tom's, (Texas Mac Man), great info on where/how to find/get Tiger...
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/15305521#15305521
    Or Ali Brown's great info on where/how to find/get Tiger...
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?messageID=10381710#10381710
    Leopard requirements/10.5.x...
        *  Mac computer with an Intel, PowerPC G5, or PowerPC G4 (867MHz or faster) processor
    minimum system requirements
        * 512MB of memory (I say 1.5GB for PPC at least, 2-3GB minimum for IntelMacs)
        * DVD drive for installation
        * 9GB of available disk space (I say 30GB at least)
    Classic/OS9 Apps no longer supported.
    May be available from Apple again...
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4720126?tstart=0
    Trouble is Apple no longer sells it, check eBay & such for the Retail version, not the Gray Discs...
    http://www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?_nkw=mac+os+x+leopard+retail+10.5
    Now, for your Trash problem, see if this helps...
    Solving Trash Problems...
    http://thexlab.com/faqs/trash.html

  • How Do I Import Playlists From Tiger To Leopard?

    OK, I give up. The following falls under the category “It Doesn’t Have To Be This Hard.”
    I purchased a new iMac and went with the 24 inch Intel 3.06 GHz Core 2 Duo, 10.5.5. Sweet.
    With my previous iMac (G5 Rev A., 10.3.9), I had Tiger 10.4.11 installed on an external HD and used it for my iTunes collection. All was well.
    Now, with Leopard on the new iMac, I’m stumped as to how I can import the playlists from Tiger’s iTunes. I’ve imported the music and podcasts, etc. from Tiger but the playlists are empty. I have them listed but all except one have no music in them.
    So, my questions (after performing a thorough review of the forums and entering every search term I could think of related to this issue) are these:
    1. How do I import playlists from Tiger to Leopard so that I get music and playlists?
    2. Where are the playlists stored? I cannot find them using a Spotlight search ( using Leopard), nor are they listed in the iTunes music files. So, where does Tiger and/or Leopard keep them?
    3. At least one playlist made it from Tiger to Leopard. Why did the other playlists arrive but w/o music in them?
    4. Is the problem I have described a common one? If so, why is there no easy fix for it. Or perhaps there is an easy fix but I’m too blind to see it.
    Anyone with answers is encouraged to reply. I’ll sign off as “flyboy01” but in reality I’m “Stumped!”
    Thanks in advance,
    flyboy01

    Just so you know, the difference in the version of the operating system has no bearing here as you would have experienced the same issue going from account to account on the same computer because you performed an incomplete iTunes transfer. As you inquired about where playlists are located, I will give you a complete break down of iTunes database structure as well as the proper technique for transferring your library.
    _*INSIDE iTUNES*_
    *iTunes Components: The Library and the Database Table*
    The term library gets thrown around quite a bit when people discuss iTunes, but what you see in iTunes denoted as your libraries (e.g., music, podcasts, TV shows, etc.) is actually just a reference to your actual media library. iTunes is essentially a database package, just like your local public library’s computer-based card catalog system; the difference is that the content is electronic and owned by the user so you can also directly access the content through iTunes instead of having to go and (physically) retrieve it. Your actual library is the collection of media files you have stored on your computer. If you think of it in terms of the real world, your media files are the virtual equivalent of the books, periodicals, microforms, etc., in a real library and the folder or volume in which those media files are contained is the library.
    While iTunes will allow you to add media to its library (iTunes library interface) from anywhere on any volume attached to your computer (e.g., branch libraries), iTunes generally expects your library to reside in a single folder (main library). In iTunes that folder is referred to as your iTunes Music folder and by default it is a folder named iTunes Music contained in your iTunes folder (~/Music/iTunes). The music folder can have any name and be located anywhere on any attached volume as long as you inform iTunes of where it is located by changing the iTunes Music folder location in the Advanced tab of iTunes’ preferences.
    How you organize music within your music folder is unimportant, but iTunes must know the location of the (root) music folder in order to properly access the media files contained within that directory. The reason for that is because once you have defined a music folder location, or leave the default, that location is where iTunes will automatically place any new content that you add to iTunes’ library. Keeping the location of the music library straight is most important to iTunes users, such as myself, that keep their actual library on a separate volume from the system volume where the iTunes folder is located.
    When iTunes uses the term library, it is actually referring to its database table file. Properly designed databases, particularly those that are scalable and that allow records (database entries) to be found or visually organized via multiple keys (metadata), as iTunes does, consist of two basic parts: the database, or source data (records), and the index table(s). In iTunes your media files are the records. Along with the actual media content, those files also contain a number of tags that provide a range of information about that particular media file (e.g., artist, song title, movie title, album, year, etc.).
    The database table is the iTunes Library file located in your iTunes folder. That file is actually what iTunes references the vast majority of the time when you are browsing your collection. The table contains metadata about all of the media files in your library and it is that metadata that is displayed in iTunes when you browse your library. When you play content or edit tags, then iTunes directly accesses the files in your library. The table also contains your playlists and playlist folders, so that is the reason that Spotlight would seem to not find them on your computer’s hard drive; Spotlight most likely did list ‘iTunes Music Library.xml’, as that file is an XML version of iTunes database table.
    If you copy the iTunes Music Library.xml file to the desktop on your old computer and open it, you will see the basic structure of the table. The first group of entries are the definitions of your media files—the code between the <dict> and </dict> tags—and contain the metadata that is displayed in iTunes and by which you can search and group music in iTunes various views. The definitions also contain metadata defining the location of the media file, if the track is enabled (checked) or disabled (un-checked), the (iTunes) track ID, etc.
    If you scroll toward the end of the XML file, you will see the definitions of your playlists and playlist folders as well as some occasional data blocks that look like gibberish. The latter is the text representation of the binary code that defines the criteria for smart playlists. On thing that you will notice about the playlist definitions is that they do not contain detailed track info or metadata for the songs contained within the playlist(s). iTunes is a relational database, so the playlists do not contain any actual data, but instead a list of indices (pointers), the Track IDs, to the definitions for each track you have in your playlists. The definitions listed in the first part of the XML file also contain only a subset of the tracks ID3 tags. The definitions only require metadata for information that is relevant to permitting you to browse and organize your library in iTunes’ interface. In the track definition, the Location metadata is an index and points to the actual media file where the complete set of ID3 tags, as well as the actual media content, reside.
    While your media resides in your music folder, the library structure you create in iTunes is actually a simple, albeit long, table stored in a separate file. Another component of iTunes is the artwork database kept in the Album Artwork folder. The Album Artwork folder contains a complex folder tree structure with proprietary .itc files at the leaves. I do not know what the exact structure of the .itc files is, but they play a role in storing image info for the various graphic-based views in iTunes (e.g., CoverFlow). Also, any songs you purchase from the iTunes Store will have the cover art stored in the Album Artwork folder; images that you add manually are stored in the actual media files.
    *Transferring Your Library to a New Computer*
    Now you see that there is more to iTunes than just your media files. Thus, if you want the playlists that you spent time building to migrate with your music collection simply copying the music folder to the new computer is not going to result in what you want: a complete transfer of the library you dedicated time and energy into organizing. When you transfer music files to a new computer iTunes builds a new library around that content and the only playlists that will be present are the defaults tha come with iTunes; your user-defined playlists will not appear on the new computer if you have not transferred the database table.
    In order to successfully transfer iTunes to a new computer you need to move your library and everything that was built around that library. To perform a complete library transfer you need to follow this procedure:
    1. *Consolidate your library* If you know for a fact that all of you media files are contained within a single root directory (e.g., iTunes Music), then this step is not necessary. If you do not have the preference to “Copy files to iTunes Music folder when adding to library” enabled, then there is a good chance that you will have orphaned media files and should consolidate your library just in case. To perform library consolidation go to Advanced > Consolidate Library (iTunes 7.x) or File > Library > Consolidate Library (iTunes 8).
    2. *Transfer your database* Replace the default iTunes folder on your new Mac with the iTunes folder from your old Mac by transferring the entire folder. When asked if you wish to replace the existing iTunes, do so.
    3. *Get the media library* If you keep your music in the default iTunes Music folder contained in the iTunes folder, then you have already performed this step. If not, transfer your music folder from you old Mac to wherever you wish for it to reside on your new Mac.
    4. *Set up iTunes* Unless you already started modifying preferences in iTunes on the new Mac, when you launch iTunes you should see your music library just as you did on your old Mac.
    a. If your library is in the default location, ~/Music/iTunes/iTunes music folder, iTunes will begin rebuilding your library after it launches. Once that process is completed, you should see your library with playlists and folders intact.
    b. If your library is in an alternate location, you will see an empty library, but you should see your playlists and folders, albeit filled with broken links. Go to the Advanced tab in iTunes’ preferences and change the location of the iTunes Music folder to the location of your transferred music library. iTunes will begin rebuilding your library from the alternate folder. Once that process is completed your library should be just as it was on your old Mac.
    5. *Keep your library consolidated* To insure that any new media that you add to iTunes stays with your main library when you add content to iTunes make sure the “Copy files” preference is enabled. If the “Copy files” preference is disabled then any content that does not come from the iTunes Store or ripped CDs that you add to your iTunes library will remain in the location where the content was originally placed.
    Hopefully this helps you better understand how iTunes works and why simply transferring your media files results in a loss of your library’s structure.

  • Lost emails upgrading from tiger to leopard

    I lost emails (although mailbox folders are still there, just empty) after upgrading from tiger to leopard. Please help?!

    I followed these instructions the last couple of times this happened to me. It works so well that I've made a text file with these instructions:
    I got it to work by deleting all the values in the defaults database associated with Mail and the Junk rules. In my case I did the following:
    Remove the Envelope Index file (~/Library/Mail/Envelope Index) from your user account.
    Launch Terminal.
    Copy/Paste this list into the Terminal window.
    defaults remove com.apple.mail JunkMailBehaviorHasBeenConfigured
    defaults remove com.apple.mail JunkMailHeaderFlags
    defaults remove com.apple.mail JunkMailInfoPanelHasBeenShown
    defaults remove com.apple.mail JunkViewerAttributes
    defaults remove com.apple.mail LastTimeJunkWasVisited
    defaults remove com.apple.mail NumberOfMessagesMarkedAsJunk
    defaults remove com.apple.mail NumberOfMessagesMarkedAsNotJunk
    defaults remove com.apple.mail UseJunkMailHeaderFlags
    Watch the rapid execution of the text commands in the Terminal window.
    Quit Terminal.
    Launch Mail.
    Follow the onscreen guides to import your mail and watch the mail database restore itself.
    All mailboxes, drafts, etc., should be quickly restored. Mail launches and quits correctly.
    You will need to start updating the Junk filter in Leopard from scratch as new junk mail shows up.

  • Mail: From Tiger to Leopard

    I am upgrading my computer from Tiger to Leopard (via a clean install) and would like to transfer all of my Tiger Mail messages/attachments/addresses/etc. to the Mail on Leopard.
    What's the simplest way to do so? Is there a way to export my messages and then important them into Leopard's Mail after the installation?
    Thank you.

    This depends on how you plan to upgrade from Tiger to Leopard. If you literally use the Upgrade install option, then your mail will be imported automatically as soon as you open Mail for the first time.
    If you are installing Leopard via Erase and Install then you can import your old mailboxes from your backups using Mail's import option. Open Mail, select Mail Help from the Help menu and search for "import" to get the instructions.
    If you install Leopard using Archive and Install and use the option to preserve users and network preferences, then your old data will be transferred into the new Leopard installation. Mail will import the data when you open it for the first time.
    The above also applies generally to Address Book and iCal data. You can also transfer the data manually from a backup:
    Folders You Can Move to Your new Mac
    From the Home folder copy the contents of Documents, Movies, Music, Pictures, and Sites.
    In your /Home/Library/ folder:
    /Home/Library/Application Support/AddressBook (copy the whole folder)
    /Home/Library/Application Support/iCal (copy the whole folder)
    Also in /Home/Library/Application Support (copy whatever else you need including folders for any third-party applications)
    /Home/Library/Keychains (copy the whole folder)
    /Home/Library/Mail (copy the whole folder)
    /Home/Library/Preferences/ (copy the whole folder)
    /Home /Library/iTunes (copy the whole folder)
    /Home /Library/Safari (copy the whole folder)
    If you want cookies:
    /Home/Library/Cookies/Cookies.plist
    /Home/Library/Application Support/WebFoundation/HTTPCookies.plist
    For Entourage users:
    Entourage is in /Home/Documents/Microsoft User Data
    Also in /Home/Library/Preferences/Microsoft
    For FireFox:
    /Home/Library/Applications Support/FireFox
    /Home/Library/Preferences/org.mozilla.firefox.plist
    Credit goes to another forum user for this information.

  • Is it worth upgrading from Tiger to Leopard?

    I have a G4 imac that I've been running on Tiger quite happily. A friend of mine has given me his old copy of Leopard (lucky bloke has just bought a new 27inch imac!). My questions are:
    1. Is it worth me changing considering there seem to be issues when installing the CD?
    2. Tiger was the last OS for a power pc based mac. Does the fact that Leopard was designed to run on both power pc and Intel OS make it less stable?
    Cheers
    Steve

    I think it is a close call. It depends on your use of the iMac. I recently upgraded my 1 GHz G4 PowerBook (1.25 GB RAM) from Tiger to Leopard and it runs much hotter than it did in Tiger. The fan kicks in more often.
    The only compelling feature in Leopard (for me and this PowerBook) is *Time Machine*. The other new features seem to need more horsepower than this old G4 can manage. If all the software you run works fine in 10.4, there is no real need to upgrade.
    On the other hand, there is lots of cool software that requires 10.5. And, Apple have dropped security updates for Tiger, so there are risks in going online! But, if your Internet connection is through an ADSL/Cable router, this acts as a firewall, so the risks are miniscule.
    Try it out and see. The best solution is to first clone your Tiger hard disk, using something like *Carbon Copy Cloner*. That way you can install Leopard and try it out, but still have an easy way to go back to your Tiger installation.
    Once you have installed Leopard, you can migrate your applications and settings from the clone of your Tiger hard disk, using the *Apple Migration Assistant*, found in Leopard's Utilities folder.
    Hope that helps
    Mike
    (Happy with his new 13" MacBook Pro)

  • Upgrading from Tiger to Leopard on and external (FireWire) drive...

    Hi all,
    I'm pretty sure this has been discussed somewhere on the www but after several hours of research, I'm embarrassed to admit I'm ready to call it quits (unless someone more tech savvy than I can help <:o)
    I've been running my OS on a WD 500GB FireWire for the past couple of years. Switched to it shortly after realizing that the 80GB HD on my MacBook was insufficient for my needs.
    Now I'm getting ready to upgrade from Tiger to Leopard and I've got some issues. Most importantly, when I launch the installer and it requires me to restart my system, I do so through both methods (holding down the "option" key to start up using the external HD and also by just allowing a normal boot under the old drive). In neither situation do I ever get the option to select where I'd like to install the new OS. In fact, when I allow the normal start without the "option" key being pressed, I don't even get to see the option to begin an installation. When I hold down the "option" key, I get the Mac OS X Install DVD screen (directory on the DVD), but it never gets to the point where I can start the installation.
    I'm at a loss and getting a little frustrated (which has been my problem since I started with Macs--been a long time PC user and I'm always looking for the difficult way of doing things--so I'm probably just being PC-stupid as usual >;o)
    Any assistance with getting me on the path to continued righteousness would be greatly appreciated. Thanks very much in advance!
    Ali T. Borahan
    http://www.alisails.com
    PS: Despite the fact that I'm PC-literate and Mac-stupid, I've managed to convince almost a dozen people to switch to Mac, simply because I'm hooked and love how the Mac community sticks together and helps one another (and also because I can't stand the Microsoft kingdom!!! <:o)

    Insert the Leopard DVD in the optical drive and restart the computer. After the chime press and hold down the "C" key until the dark gray Apple logo appears on the screen. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button.
    When the menubar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu. After DU loads select your startup drive's entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list. In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive. If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer.
    If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior (4.0 for Tiger, and 4.1 for Leopard) and/or TechTool Pro (4.6.1 for Leopard) to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X.
    Continue with the installation process until you reach the point where you must select a Target drive. Select your Target drive then click on the Options button in the lower left corner of the dialog.
    Select the Archive and Install option.
    An Archive and Install will NOT erase your hard drive, but you must have sufficient free space for a second OS X installation which could be from 3-9 GBs depending upon the version of OS X and selected installation options. The free space requirement is over and above normal free space requirements which should be at least 6-10 GBs. Read all the linked references carefully before proceeding.
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