G5 to Mac pro upgrade/transfer/cannibal  advice needed

My Mac g5 (2.5 dual) was dead this morning, (PMU or the motherboard ???). Rather than putting more money into it, I purchased a new Mac Pro today. Since I can't start up my old computer at all, I need some upgrade/transfer/cannibalize advice.
1) Can I just put my drives from the G5 into the new drive slots? (I will really need to get to my files ASAP when it gets here)
2) Do you recommend using Migration Assistant or clean installs of all programs? Obviously, MA would be so much faster but I am not sure how dependable it is
3) Can I use the NVIDIA GeForce 6600 (256MB) card from the G5 as an extra? Or just sell it with the G5 for parts?
4) Is there a list somewhere that shows compatible hardware and software? I'm using 10.5 so Snow Leopard is new to me. I'd like to keep from spending money on peripherals.
5) Did I forget anything? Any additional tips would be appreciated
TIA

Hi-
There is a list of SL compatible software here:
http://snowleopard.wikidot.com/
More here:
http://www.macintouch.com/specialreports/snowleopard/slcompat.html
Here is an article on incompatible apps:
http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3258
Another:
http://guides.macrumors.com/Listof_Applications_Not_Compatible_with_SnowLeopard
Hardware-wise, peripherals shouldn't be much of an issue unless they require third party drivers that weren't updated.
Your G5 internal parts are limited to hard drives for compatibility.
You do want to be aware of hard drive format differences for Intel Macs and PPC Macs regarding GPT (GUID Partition Table) and Apple Partition Map (APM).
Intel Macs boot to either, but PPC Macs only boot to APM.
Intel Mac software (OS) installer only want to install and update to GPT, so if you want to use existing drives to install OS X SL to, you will need to reformat the drive.

Similar Messages

  • Mac Pro boot drive migration advice needed.

    I have a new Mac Pro.  I would like to simply pull the boot HD of my old MP (a 1.1), and stick it in the new one (a 5.1 hex).  Bad idea?

    lahz wrote:
    I have a new Mac Pro.  I would like to simply pull the boot HD of my old MP (a 1.1), and stick it in the new one (a 5.1 hex).  Bad idea?
    I did what you're asking about using the same hardware and found that it booted just fine. However, I immediately ran a Lion upgrade and that Lion boot disk has run like a champ ever since. Since I was careful not to let software update do over my printer drivers, I also managed to keep some Epson legacy drivers that made the printer that worked on the 1,1 still usable. And that method also retained most of my software registrations so I didn't have to deal with the vendors.
    However, if you want to keep Snow Leopard, I'd suggest after booting, immediately running the 10.6.8 combo updater, which might make the 1,1 System software more compatible with the 5,1 machine. That assumes that your new Mac is old enough to have been delivered with Snow Leopard on it, since there's some question if the Mac Pro's with Lion have been "fixed" to not accept a Snow Leopard install.

  • Virus on mac pro...help/advice needed please.

    Hi all,
    I've just run Clamxav scan on my mac pro & it's showing an infected file in my USER directory, named    .rserv    & the infection name is   OSX.Flashback-8 
    Tried to delete this file in Clamxav & it says its moved it to trash, but when i look in trash its empty! Then, when I rerun the scan it again says the file is still there in my  users  directory.  However I can't find this file using Finder. Clamxav says it's located at:  users/my name/.serv
    Can someone please tell me  1 - what is this file?   & 2 - How the **** do i get rid of it?
    btw, the 1st time i ran the scan it showed 2 other suspicious files that I sent to trash & then emptied the trash... one was a file called  download.dmg (with the infection name  Adware.OSX   which was in my downloads folder)  & the 2nd file name was called  Tube2FileSetup.exe  (infection name  Trojan.Agent-290842   again this was in my download folder). These no longer appear to be on my system.
    Thanks in advance.
    Mac Pro Nehalem quad 2.66GHz, 6GB RAM, OS 10.6.3

    http://www.bing.com/search?q=Flashback+OS+X
    your mac isn't running 10.6.8 and therefore wasn't updated with Apple's latest security patches. And I guess you missed the "memo" and alerts months ago.
    https://support.apple.com/kb/HT5244
    http://reviews.cnet.com/8301-13727_7-57403430-263/detecting-and-removing-the-fla shback-malware-in-os-x/

  • Inputting to mac pro late 2013 - new connections needed?

    Pretty happy with the zippy new Mac Pro, but looks like I need to buy some new stuff for it.
    Since the only way to input audio on the base machine is to go through the single (mono) audio input in the headphone jack, I'm trying to work out the most affordable way to input stereo via another method.  Going to try a USB I/O device, but I'm hoping the old, old USB CODEC trick still works.  Don't really want to buy a three-hundred dollar device to do what my old Griffin iMic used to do.
    Next, SD cards from my DSLR.  I thought that a simple card reader, plugged into any USB port would do the trick, but no dice.  The card is simply not showing up on the desktop, nor as an option in Image Capture or Adobe Lightroom.  Am using a very fast SD card (SanDisk Estreme 32 GB 45 MB/s) plugged directly into the Mac Pro, and it's just not showing up.  Disk Utility cannot even see it... a mystery.
    Could it be that the Canon 6D formats the card as an MS/DOS FAT32?  My very old (2007) Mac Pro sees the card just fine.
    Maybe I am just doing something wrong.

    Great, smart question, llaass.
    Looks like my old reliable card read reader simply chose this week to burn out.  I plugged the card into an ancient cheap plastic reader my son got at a Chuck E. Cheese's and the card showed right up!  Question B answered.  It's just going to take three hours to transfer 6 gigs of photos.  Have ordered a "USB 3.0 Reader" for twelve bucks and will try the same process this weekend to compare speeds.  Cannot imagine the read speed will differ that much, but I'll post a result when I've done that.
    Audio-wise, I am looking to do stereo line in from tape.  That m-audio product, the Transit USB, (which even has an optical input) was looking good to me, but it's been discontinued.  I now officially curse myself for throwing away a perfectly good twenty-dollar griffin adapter.  Next time my wife accuses me of never throwing any old tech away, I will hold this experience up as justification for my boxes of cables and connectors.
    I've ordered a Behringer UCA222 off of Amazon and will try that out when it arrives.  Will follow up with the (hopefully) happy result this weekend.

  • Trying to update apple tv (small black box).  how do i do update?  can't find system settings. i see system preferences no mac pro.  does apple tv need to be plugged into hdtv for the update or PC.  If PC, how?

    trying to update apple tv (small black box).  how do i do update?  can't find system settings. i see system preferences no mac pro.  does apple tv need to be plugged into hdtv for the update or PC.  If PC, how?

    You have to do it on the Apple TV itself while it's plugged into a TV so that you can see its screen.
    I quote
    How to update software on your Apple TV (2nd and 3rd generation)
    Learn how to update the software on your Apple TV (2nd and 3rd generation). It's always a good idea to have the latest software on your Apple TV.
    Update your software
    Select Settings > General > Update Software. Apple TV checks for an available update; if one is available, a download message should appear.
    Click Download and Install to start the download process.
    Do not disconnect your Apple TV during the update process. The Apple TV status light may flash slowly during the update and restart process. This is expected behavior.

  • New mac pro upgrade advice needed or keep the old clunker

    I have a 2008 mac pro with only 8gb ram
    I am use the  computer for FCP and Logic as well
    as photo editing.  It is not my livelihood I am just a serious hobbiest.
    My option is to go with a new Mac Pro probably 8 core with 1 TB
    I would have to get an enclosure for my 4  thunderbolt internal drives.
    I also have 2 firewire 800 2T external drives.
    My monitor is a 30 inch cinema display
    so an 8 core with 64gb plus 4k monitor and upped graphics card is $11,600 add my buisness discount i am probably
    looking at around $11,000
    My other option is to keep the clunker add a 1TB SSD PCIe card form owc and add 8gb ram this will
    cost me $1,400. I am really only throwing away the $200 for increasing the ram as
    the PCIe ssd drive can be salveged and used in the new mac pro if I bought an pcie/ thunderbolt  enclosure.
    Tha advantage of going this route is I could use the clunker for another year allowing time
    for the kinks in the new mac pro to be ironed out as well as the advantage of faster chips in next years model.
    The other issue I have is a use a Universal Audio PCI card with 4 sharc processors to run specific plugins that need that
    card in logic.  That card will no be compatible with the new Mac pro and the replacement cards are over $1000 that are compatibe
    Just looking for some advice do you think the SSD PCI card and ram will keep me happy with the performance to hold off upgrading for
    a year or shoul I just put the clumker out of its misery?

    radman wrote:
    Just looking for some advice do you think the SSD PCI card and ram will keep me happy with the performance to hold off upgrading for
    a year or shoul I just put the clumker out of its misery?
    On this page Apple compares the 2012 Mac Pro (12-core) to a 2013 Mac Pro (12-core). The new Mac Pro performs about 3x faster at rendering. You didn't say how many cores your Mac Pro has but you could expect about a 4-5x faster performance increase.
    I would have some questions for you:
    How much time do you spend waiting on your current Mac Pro?
    How much money are you willing to spend for a 4-5x increase?
    I have a 2010 Mac Pro with a 960 GB OWC Mercury Accelsior E2 PCIe SSD, program launches and computer restarts are much faster. Compressing video takes the same amount of time as it did when I booted from a hard drive. I can't read or type email any faster, iTunes plays music just as fast as it always has with a hard drive.
    I would use Activity Monitor to monitor your computer's memory use while you work with FCP and Logic to see if you are maxing out your memory then adding more may be the way to go.
    I use my Mac Pro for recording over-the-air TV and compressing that video into an Apple TV usable format. I've found that having a dedicated drive for capture works well. Also, when I compress the video my capture drive becomes a dedicated source drive for Compressor and I write the output file to a separate dedicated drive. This ensures I maximize data flow and keep all my cores nearly fully utilized. I tend to do the processor intensive tasks (compressing video which can take hours) at the end of the day when I know I won't be using the computer (or only doing light work on it such as email or web surfing).

  • Never owned a Mac, thinking of buying a Mac Pro, could use some advice...

    Hey guys,
    I know this was a lot to read, but I sincerely hope someone will take the time to answer my questions:
    As the title of my post implies I've never owned a Mac in my life. I've always built my own desktops and usually gone to HP or Dell for my laptops. I'm approaching that time again where my custom-built desktop is looking outdated and I'm getting the upgrade itch. I'm looking at all the parts I need to order to build a computer and I can't help but think I'm older now with a full-time job and a one year old daughter in the house. Do I really want to go through the hassle of building a desktop from scratch again? Not really. So I started evaluating things a bit. As I get older I’m really just getting sick and tired of Microsoft’s antics (Vista was a huge disappointment for me) so I decided this could be the year for me to take the Mac plunge.
    Now I’m an IT guy, so I have a pretty atypical setup at home. I’m currently running both Windows and Linux on all my computers. Rather than dual boot or use virtualization software I have a pretty intricate system in which I use a product called Acronis Trueimage to experiment with operating systems. What I do is perform a a clean install on an operating system, tweak it as needed for security and to use resources on my LAN than back up the customized OS install to a server a an image file. I have pre-built images for XP, Vista, Ubuntu and OpenSuSE that I can roll out to one of my machines in an average of 15 minutes whenever I get the urge to switch operating systems. I also serve all my data off a NAS box, so since data and OS are kept separate on the network I don’t have to worry about erasing something when I swap between Linux and Windows (as loading an image literally destroys the previous OS install).
    So you can see I’m pretty highly specialized. I even have things down to the point to where I have custom images for specific purposes. For instance I have one XP image customized for development, one XP image customized for gaming, etc. Naturally if I got the Mac Pro I’d like to have the freedom to create a similar set of custom OS deployment images (Windows, Linux and OSX) for it as well. In researching the Mac Pro I have some concerns my current system might not work if I go that route. Am I correct in assuming that in order to run an alternative operating system on a Mac I’ll have to run boot camp or something like it? Or upon unboxing my Mac and tweaking Leopard will I be able to use disk imaging software to make a backup image of my preinstalled Leopard hard drive and then do a clean install of Windows XP or Ubuntu and set it up to function like a PC? I guess I’m asking if it’s possible (now that Macs are Intel-based) to run Windows or Linux exclusively on the Mac hardware?
    Also I have some concerns about the proprietary nature of the Mac platform. From what I can gather in my research it seems the hardware is pretty locked in. One area that has me really concerned is gaming. I pretty much use Ubuntu exclusively at home for productivity and web surfing. However I still like to load that XP image every now and then to play some games on the LAN with my buddies. I’m not a fan of virtualizing for gaming because of the obvious performance hit you take, so I’d have to be able to run Windows XP free and clear. Also I checked Nvidia’s site and I see no OSX drivers listed there for their cards. Under the Windows platform they are always releasing driver updates to squeeze more game performance out of your card. What if I want to upgrade my video card? How do drivers work on OSX? Does Apple just integrate drivers for just a few specific video cards into the OS? Will I be stuck only able to pick from a handful of video cards approved by Apple?
    Thanks in advance to anyone who can offer advice!
    Message was edited by: ZeusABJ

    Hi Zeus
    I may be able to answer some of your questions. And sorry in advance if this sounds like yet another of those "religious conversion" stories
    I'm a software developer/architect, mostly doing Microsoft .NET/C#/Web Services coding. I'd been a loyal Microsoft guy since I started on the original IBM PC back in the 80's. Like a lot of people (or so it seems) I just got fed up with Microsoft's high-handed and self-important ways. More importantly, the company always seemed to be lagging behind technically. Looking at beta versions of Vista did not bode well for the future - it just seemed awful. When Vista came out it it was the last straw - I just could not get enthusiastic about this bloated, slow, mess of an operating system. I really hated it. Still do. Even with a top-spec machine, Vista didn't run in the snappy, responsive way it I thought it should. Nothing seemed well thought out.. yuck!
    Then, by chance, I was staying for a few days with somebody who had a Mac. Now, for years and years I not even considered Macs as remotely serious machines. My only experience of them was in the late 80's when somebody at work had one. He took delight in pushing a floppy disc into the machine so that it would respond "Ah, it's so big!". Great, just a toy. Not for serious programming work. So, encountering Mac OS X Tiger on my friend's iMac was something of a shock. It was so responsive, clean and elegant. When you turned it on it only took about 30 seconds or so for the thing to be ready for use, etc, etc.
    Long story short, I bought an iMac, then a newer, bigger, faster iMac, then a MacBook Pro and now I have a Mac Pro. I still have to work with Windows to do my .NET-related day job. But 95% of the time I work on the Mac using various VMWare virtual machines. I can switch between Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP in a few seconds and still be working in a Mac environment. And the performance of running Windows inside VMWare is even better than on my dedicated top-spec Windows laptop! I have a selection of virtual machines to choose from and, because these virtual machines are just files, I can back them up, revert to saved copies, etc. I've tried Bootcamp but it's much less convenient and performance inside the virtual machines is never an issue (although I don't do any gaming). So, you could keep virtual machines on your NAS box or local Mac hard drive.
    With regard to graphics drives, etc. I've never had any problems whatever in this respect. For example, when I installed Windows XP on VMWare it automatically recognised all my hardware (including some obscure audio interfaces, USB-based MIDI interfaces, etc.) and made it available. I must admit that when I was new to the Mac I expected to have driver issues, but never have had... So, my guess is that you'll be able to run all your Windows and Linux distros on the Mac without too many problems.
    You mention Apple's hardware as being "locked-in". I don't think that's the case. Certainly the consumer Mac models like the iMac can't be upgraded (by you or me) internally, expect for memory. The Mac Pro though is very easy to upgrade - though there may be some limitations with regard graphics cards.
    Re your questions about graphics card drivers. Yes, these come with OS X in just the same as as with Windows. Because I've also used the card that comes "with the box" this has not been an issue for me. However, unless you get a Mac Pro you can't swap-in your existing graphics card. And even then I think you may find restrictions. However, other, more knowledgeable Mac users on this forum may have other thoughts.
    Overall though, the experience of using the Mac in terms of software is very much the reverse of Windows - the OS is very open and well documented. It really is an IT person's dream machine - so much to fiddle around with (particularly if you know anything about Unix!). Unlike Microsoft who charge a FORTUNE for their development tools, Apple give them to you for free. And very good they are too!
    Finally, one bit of advice. If you are considering buying a new Mac, join the Apple Developer Connection scheme as a Select member. It'll cost you around $400 to join but they give you a hardware discount for Apple-store purchased items that will save you a ton of $$$'s - absolutely definitely worth doing.
    Hope this helps (and good luck)!
    Russ

  • Mac Pro Upgrade

    Looking for some advice with computer upgrade and compatibility of Creative Cloud 2014. We're looking at the Mac Pro Quad-Core and Dual GPU. Any input; pros/cons?

    Scan all the help tips here first:
    http://macperformanceguide.com/index_topics.html
    6-core 32-64-128GB RAM, D500 or D700s, and of course the 1TB SSD.
    Otherwise a maxed out iMac
    The 2012 Mac Pro is probably a better fit even though it is older.

  • Mac Pro Upgrading Questions!

    Hello,
    I have a 2007 model mac Pro with these specs:
    2 x 2.66 GHz Dual-Core Intel Xeon Processor
    6GB 667 MHz DDR2 FB-DIMM Memory
    I work with a lot of AVCHD video footage and graphics, there is a lot of rendering involved and my computer can no longer handle such things without an inordinate amount of slowdown and waiting!
    So! Do I upgrade my current machine or get a new Mac pro? Or an iMac? Refurbished or new? Quad core or eight? Forgive my basic Mac knowledge I would be hugely grateful for any insights or advice.
    Thank you all.
    (Also I wish to use FCP7 and Motion 4, I understand there are some problems using Final Cut Studio 2 with Lion, is this true?)

    You can find a long thread on putting a pair of 5355s to get 8-core and nearly double performance. Some time and paitience but very popular and cheap to do now.
    MacRumors Mac Pro
    Mac Pro 2010 6-core 3.33GHz would be in $3500 ball park but I'd hold off and wait.
    SSD boot drive
    4 x 4GB RAM minimum
    ATI 5770

  • 2009 Mac Pro upgrading graphics card to GTX 680 mac. What is the best version of AE and PP and OSX to have?

    Hello,
    I have a 2009 Mac Pro 4.1
    Mac OSX version 10.6.8
    Processor - 2 x 2.26 GHz Quad-Core Intel Xeon
    Memory - 24GB
    Graphics Card - ATI Radeon HD 4870
    I use After Effects and Premiere Pro daily for my work. I am not too technically minded. I want to update and improve my machine as much as possible and am thinking of buying an SSD drive to replace my current start up disk. I also am thinking about getting the GTX 680 mac version graphics card. I have read many online discussions regarding OpenCL and CUDA, many discussions with mixed feelings about the improvements the 680 gives an older Mac Pro - some people say it is amazing others say the improvements seem minimal or worse.
    What I want to know is if I purchase the SSD and 680 graphics card what is the optimal OSX - 10.8 or 10.9? and what is the optimal versions of AE and PP to have - CS6 or CC? Also what settings and what additional drivers would I need to consider?
    I contacted an independent authorised mac reseller and he thought it was a bad idea to put a new graphics card and get the latest OSX in an old machine and tried to sell me a used 2010 Mac Pro, but I think it would be more cost effective to get the SSD and 680 instead, it's just I read the occasional horror story on a forum and I worry about making the wrong choice, I rely on my Mac Pro to make a living!
    Thanks in advance

    Thank you for the valuable information Eric, I think I will go with the 680 but I understand that it wont be fully utilised on my old Mac Pro.
    Perhaps I will replace my startup/applications hard drive with a 480GB SSD. My other 3 bays are full with 3 x 2TB Hard drives that have media on them so I have no spare room for a dedicated SSD drive for AE cache. But could I put a 250GB SSD into one of the PCI-E slots using something like - SSD SuperSpeed Upgrade Kit for Apple Mac Pro 2008 2009 2010 2012 | eBay
    Would this be my best solution? Is it a relatively simple installation, does anyone have any experience of a similar setup?
    cc_merchant, thank you for the reply, I am aware you have to pay monthly payments for CC, that is no problem.

  • 2009 Mac Pro upgrade to Yosemite failed

    Hi,
    Seven days in and my 2009 Mac Pro is still dead.  Very frustrated.  It had a 4x3TB AppleRAID array in RAID1+0 giving 6TB.  I initially did an upgrade to Yosemite and it got stuck at the half-way point after the restart.  Yes, I did patiently wait ... but gave up after 12 hours (left it overnight).  I assume the upgrade was supposed to finish sooner than that?
    Found one stripe in the RAID array was 'degraded' - replaced that disk (seems they had 11000 hours on them) but it was impossible (for me) to see how to get the new disk back into the RAID scheme under Disk Utility (booted up using an upgraded MacBook).  Once all the disks were removed from the array, Disk Utility gave no option to create a new RAID scheme, so I downloaded SoftRAID - yay, my RAID array was back (seems Apple gave up on their software RAID in 2009?).
    However, still no joy.  Created a Yosemite install USB drive - seems to run but then fails at the end ... "couldn't bless installation disk: /Volumes/Image Volume".
    Okay, so downloaded the Mavericks installer and created an install USB drive - same as Yosemite ... can't bless the installation disk.
    What else can I try?  The Yosemite upgrade seems to have well and truly screwed my poor Mac Pro.  I'd already successfully upgraded two of our four Macs successfully to Yosemite (one upgrade and one clean install) so thought it was okay.
    I might try booting off one of the Macs again, with the Mac Pro in target disk mode, and try to run the installer to install Mavericks or Yosemite onto the Mac Pro's RAID array as an external disk ...
    Otherwise ... ?

    Booted the Mac Pro from the MacBook Air running Yosemite in target disk mode.  Ran the Yosemite installer on the MBA to install on the Mac Pro's SoftRAID array "Hollie" - when the installer tells me it's going to restart I see the final logs written at 04:50 below:
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: @(#)PROGRAM:Install  PROJECT:Install-920
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: @(#)PROGRAM:IA  PROJECT:InstallAssistant-532
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Hardware: MacPro4,1 @ 2.66 GHz (x 16), 24576 MB RAM
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Running OS Build: Mac OS X 10.10 (14A389)
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: USER=brett
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: PATH=/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/sbin
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: LOGNAME=brett
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/private/tmp/com.apple.launchd.AzaK6cdqED/Listeners
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: Apple_PubSub_Socket_Render=/private/tmp/com.apple.launchd.o7DsCKSkcX/Render
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: HOME=/Users/brett
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: SHELL=/bin/bash
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: __CF_USER_TEXT_ENCODING=0x1F5:0x0:0x0
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: TMPDIR=/var/folders/r9/vckptcb10fxgj44jppfcg04h0000gn/T/
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: XPC_SERVICE_NAME=com.apple.InstallAssistant.Yosemite.158788
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: SSH_AUTH_SOCK=/private/tmp/com.apple.launchd.AzaK6cdqED/Listeners
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: Apple_PubSub_Socket_Render=/private/tmp/com.apple.launchd.o7DsCKSkcX/Render
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: XPC_FLAGS=0x0
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: LOGNAME=brett
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: USER=brett
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: HOME=/Users/brett
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: SHELL=/bin/bash
    Nov  1 04:45:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Env: TMPDIR=/var/folders/r9/vckptcb10fxgj44jppfcg04h0000gn/T/
    Nov  1 04:45:20 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Using distribution archive from /Users/brett/Desktop/Install OS X Yosemite.app/Contents/SharedSupport/OSInstall.mpkg
    Nov  1 04:45:21 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Configuring products from SharedSupport folder
    Nov  1 04:45:21 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Install is double-dmg. Not adding chunklist to download list.
    Nov  1 04:45:21 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Using product <OSInstallDVDProduct> based on media at /Users/brett/Desktop/Install OS X Yosemite.app/Contents/SharedSupport at distance 5
    Nov  1 04:45:21 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Using product <OSInstallESDProduct> based on distribution at /Users/brett/Desktop/Install OS X Yosemite.app/Contents/SharedSupport/OSInstall.mpkg at distance 5
    Nov  1 04:45:21 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Checking Software Update catalog URL https://swscan.apple.com/content/catalogs/others/index-10.10-10.9-mountainlion-l ion-snowleopard-leopard.merged-1.sucatalog
    Nov  1 04:45:21 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: No available package ref for compatibility update. Ignoring.
    Nov  1 04:45:21 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: No available package ref for compatibility update. Ignoring.
    Nov  1 04:45:23 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Using product <OSSoftwareUpdateCatalogProduct> from product keys (null) at distance 25
    Nov  1 04:45:30 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: LSExceptions [0x6300000bee40] unloaded
    Nov  1 04:49:16 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: IATool launched
    Nov  1 04:49:16 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Connected to IATool 26fa80
    Nov  1 04:49:17 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Preventing machine sleep.
    Nov  1 04:49:17 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Using product IA_PKSecureNetEnabledProduct <file:///Volumes/Hollie/OS%20X%20Install%20Data/> at distance 5
    Nov  1 04:49:17 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistantTool[738]: Using existing boot files dir at /.IABootFiles
    Nov  1 04:49:17 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Using mutable product path: /Volumes/Hollie/OS X Install Data
    Nov  1 04:49:17 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Using boot files path: /.IABootFiles
    Nov  1 04:49:17 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Retrieving 1 packages (0.000 GB)
    Nov  1 04:49:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Retrieved package com.apple.pkg.CompatibilityUpdate (http://swcdn.apple.com/content/downloads/14/57/031-11010/vhdn34frx9suyfcrslj0xyx n3t0dafhkn8/OSX_10_10_IncompatibleAppList.pkg)
    Nov  1 04:49:19 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Verifying InstallMacOSX.pkg/InstallESD.dmg
    Nov  1 04:49:33 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Finished operation queue
    Nov  1 04:50:10 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistantTool[738]: Failed to set prev-lang:kbd
    Nov  1 04:50:10 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistantTool[738]: hdiejectd already disabled.
    Nov  1 04:50:12 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistantTool[738]: Failed to prep /Volumes/OS X Install ESD for brtool
    Nov  1 04:50:12 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistantTool[738]: Failed to prep /Volumes/OS X Base System for brtool
    Nov  1 04:50:13 192-168-1-11.tpgi.com.au InstallAssistant[721]: Failed to write mutable product url to NVRAM

  • Mac Pro drive configuration/expansion advice for Time Machine

    I have the following:
    Mac Pro 1Tb internal drive (2 x 500Gb in software RAID, so 2 drive bays used, 2 free)
    500Gb external drive (Formac XTR platinum - 2 x 250Gb in RAID)
    I use SuperDuper to backup the internal to the external - I'm using about 440Gb on the internal and this fits on the external with about 10-20Gb spare. However, my usage of the internal drive is growing, and as Time Machine backups grow in size, my 500Gb external will very quickly lose the ability to go back in time and shortly afterwards run out of space for even a simple backup.
    My options are:
    1. Buy 2 500Gb IDE drives and upgrade the external to 1Tb - Cost about £140. If I put the redundant 250Gb drives in enclosures and sell them, net cost would come down to about £100
    2. Buy single 750Gb SATA drive and install internally for TM backups - cost £110. Sell external drive and cost comes down to about £40
    3. Buy 2 500Gb SATA drives and install inside Mac Pro for Time Machine - Cost about £130. Sell external and cost about £60
    4. Buy single 1Tb SATA drive and install internally for TM backups - cost £200. Sell external and cost about £130
    Pros & Cons
    Option 1 - Con: Left with untidy external enclosure. Pro - 2 internal bays free for expansion.
    Option 2 - Con: Less internal expansion, Pro: No untidy external box, can add another 750Gb drive when required
    Option 3 - Con: No internal expansion. Pro: Ermmm, not sure.
    Option 3 - Con: Most expensive. Pro: Longer time required before need to add another drive.
    I know external drives are useful for off-site backups but I do have a 160Gb and a 320Gb external drives for that purpose (and for TM'ing my MacBook).
    I think I've answered my own question - get a 750Gb SATA drive and stick it inside.
    Regards,
    Steve

    I am in a similar situation. I have a 160gb for my boot/system drive and two 500gb for data, backed up to two other 500gb drives. Both 500gb drives are about 80% full and I bring in 50 or gig a week, paring it down quite a bit, then importing new photos and culling them out again. I may replace my 160 backup drive for my boot partition with a 750gig, but I don't see Time Machine being capable of backing up a 500 or 750gig drive that had several hundred gigs of current data and moves gig after gig onto and then out of the hard drive. I think Time Machine will be really great for many many people, and if it allows me to "roll back" my system to an earlier known-good point in time even better than my current method of using superduper when I feel my system is stable, then Time Machine will be great for me too, but I don't see how it's going to be usable for data backup for heavy professional photographic work or for video backup where large amounts of data are entered, deleted, entered again, deleted, etc etc. There isn't enough anectodal information on Time Machine to know what size is going to be really required, but I think most folks will be surprised at how much room is going to be needed - especially those that use their machines heavily. Mom and Dad who do nothing but a few emails and surfing the web will have no problem, Mac Pro users involved with grahics and video...not so easy I'm afraid. Time will tell.

  • Mac Pro Upgradable from one core to two cores?

    If I were to buy a Mac Pro with One 3.33GHz 6-Core Intel Xeon “Westmere” would I be able to get a second One 3.33GHz 6-Core Intel Xeon “Westmere” and put it in later?

    From what I could grasp at this forum and general googling, you can totally upgrade the Mac Pro with another processor later. People have done it to 2006, 2008 and 2009 models. Take a look at AnandTech and also www.o0o.it.
    It doesn't seem to be an easy procedure, but if you had some experience with computer parts before it would not be a too much of a trouble.
    There are two main issues you can face:
    1. You need to make sure that your Mac Pro will have two processor slots on the motherboard. I wasn't able to find an exact confirmation of that on the net.
    2. You will most definitely have only one heatsink installed, so you will need to buy a second one. Apparently, they are not identical, as in Apple's parts list they are listed as "A" and "B", but I'm not sure about that. Check the www.welovemacs.com they seem to have one on sale. Btw, it also looks like the 2010 model and 2009 models have the identical heatsinks, so you should be able to find it on eBay.
    I'm looking at the Mac Pro myself at the moment, and it seems that there is literally no reason to buy more dual-CPU models. Xeons will not cost peanuts in the future, but they will definitely be cheaper than now.

  • PowerMac G5 to Mac Pro Upgrade?

    Hello everyone,
    I am using my PowerMac:
    Model Name: Power Mac G5
    Model Identifier: PowerMac7,3
    Processor Name: PowerPC G5 (2.2)
    Processor Speed: 2 GHz
    Number Of CPUs: 2
    L2 Cache (per CPU): 512 KB
    Memory: 2 GB
    Bus Speed: 1 GHz
    GeForce 6800 Ultra with 256 MB RAM
    mostly for Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign (all CS2), work with MS Office 2008 and play World Of Warcraft and other Blizzard games. As I work from home and use this as my main computer (Skype, iPhoto, iTunes, Internet surfing, Streaming content to my Playstation 3 etc.) it sometimes gets a bit slower.
    Would you recommend a new desktop machine (Mac Pro 3.2 GHz) or will the advantage be not that noticable and more RAM (I have 2GB at the moment) would give me some speed up so I can work with it for another year or so?

    I think going from 2 x 2GHz to an 8-core 2.8GHz would be more than adequate and nice upgrade, no need for spending a fortune extra for minor improvement when you'll need RAM and disk drives.
    2GB falls in the "malnourished" department
    Some articles and benchmarks, mostly Barefeats:
    http://www.barefeats.com/octopro3.html 4 vs 8 cores
    http://www.barefeats.com/harper2.html GPU tests
    http://www.barefeats.com/harper.html CPU crunching
    Photoshop:
    http://www.adobe.com/go/kb401089
    http://homepage.mac.com/boots911/.Public/PhotoshopAccelerationBasics2.4W.pdf
    And of course well-suited for CS3/4 (you NEED CS3 on Mac Pro). And of course there are Radeon 2600 OEM or 8800GT, or there is a retail ATI Radeon 3870, better options in video.
    Memory. Look for at least 8 x 1GB to get ideal bandwidth of memory performance, and if you work with large files, even more memory.
    http://www.barefeats.com/harper3.html
    If you want to stay where you are for now and wait/save for a year, I'd upgrade your RAM to 4-6GB, and invest in disk drives, anywhere from $150 up, which will help now and tomorrow, now that 100MB/sec is doable with single drives.
    http://www.barefeats.com/harper14.html
    http://www.barefeats.com/hard103.html
    One person put in three WD VelociRaptors, one for boot system, and two for stripped RAID for data and editing (using Sonnet Jive for two of them along with SATA controller). Instantly launch and open large files and applications.
    Shop the Apple Store Specials. You can walk away and save on ref'd Mac Pros.

  • Is the Mac Pro upgradable beyond 3GHz?

    I'm considering a 2 GHz Mac Pro and it's nice to know that in a few years I can drop 3 GHz processors into it. Does anyone have any insight as to whether there will be processors beyond 3 GHz supported by the current generation of Mac Pros? Or is the 3 GHz Xeon 5160 part the fastest chip that will ever live in the current Mac Pro?

    That depends on whether the chips have been soldered to the board. In a few years, though, it would be rather pointless. It woud be more realistic to get a new system, Xeon's would have a new generation by then, heck, we are getting Core3 by the beginning of next year, and they will be quad core.
    The Mac Pro's Xeon CPUs sit in sockets. They are not soldered.
    The quad-core chips that are coming (Clovertown) are backward compatible with Woodcrest, like Merom is backward compatible with Yonah. It's not impossible that when those quad-core chips arrive we'll be able to drop them into current Mac Pros without buying new systems.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Help required in writing PCR's

    Hi All, Update on this is highly appreciable and points will be rewarded. Thanks & Regards, surya Hi All, To calculate OT as per the Client requirement two PCR's needs to be wriiten. 1. OT should not be paid if it is less than 30 mins. 2. OT should b

  • CF7 - sending a form using "Enter" key

    As I wrote in the subject, i've goit a question. How can I send a form using the "Enter" key. When I push the Enter nothing happneds. Can someone help me?

  • [SOLVED[Ncmpcpp music visualizer]

    Hey. I've done few search on how to achieve that feature... but can't figure how to get it. I have set a path on mpd.conf with the "path" line, and on the ncmpcpp config with i set the path to it. What i am doing wrong? Last edited by YamiFrankc (200

  • I have a great marketing idea for Adobe

    I would like to talk/email to someone in Adobe's Marketing department that could significantly improve their software sales. I have done a few searches on Google and the couple of names that I come up with are good (John Loiacono, senior vice preside

  • SQL help - urgent

    Hello all, I have to write an SQL and do not know how to formulate it. I would appreciate if anyone can give me the SQL for the below question: I have 2 tables(Transaction and Programs) Transaction data: Trans_ID| Trans_Pgm| Trans_Short_Desc| Trans_D