How do I go back to Snow Leopard after upgrading to Mountain Lion ?

After upgrading from Snow Loepard to Mountain Lion, a key piece of Firewire equipment (a Tascam FW-1082) no longer works. The computer (and Logic Pro) doesn't show that it's even connected now !? The manufacture no longer produces or support's it, so a driver upgrade is out of the question. HELP !!! I want to ditch Mountain Lion and go back to Snow Leopard . . . I don't have a Time Machine image to go back to, I just want to know How best to re-install Snow Leopard from the upgrade disk I purchased, or even get my Macbook back to how it was the day I bought it and then once again upgrade to Snow Leopard. Many THANKS !!!

You'll need to erase your disk. Be sure to create a backup.
Use SuperDuper or CCC. If you purchased the retail SL upgrade you can use that, but you'll sill need your original install disks for your iLife apps. After that on the first boot of the new system, in Setup Assistant choose to migrate only your user from the clone.
If the backward migration presents any problems, you can do it over and just drag your own data manually. Then you have to re-install any other software you purchased.

Similar Messages

  • I have Mac OS X 10.5.8. How do I upgrade to Snow Leopard to upgrade to Mountain Lion?

    I have Mac OS X 10.5.8. How do I upgrade to Snow Leopard to upgrade to Mountain Lion?

    Your machine is likely too dated to run 10.8 at all , or if it does will run slow.
    It won't run your PPC based software or hardware drives for external hardware.
    10.6 will run your PPC software and likely is best for that machine performance speaking, Software Update to 10.6.8 and stay there.
    You better do your research first.
    Things to consider before upgrading OS X
    Or else get this
    Why is my computer slow?
    and then have to do this
    How to erase and install Snow Leopard 10.6
    or this
    How to revert your Mac to Snow Leopard
    but before you do anything, you really need to do this
    Most commonly used backup methods

  • How do I remotely access my Snow Leopard server from my Mountain Lion MacBook Air

    Does anyone know of an idiot's guide to setting up a VPN to access my server? I'm running Snow Leopard server in the office and I'd like to be able to access the server, probably just from one computer (MacBook Air runnung Mountain Lion) from home.
    I'm not sure if it complicates things or not, but the office is in an area with poor broadband and so the internet connection is via satellite broadband. The set up is a satellite modem into a Gigabit router and the server is connected to the router via an unmanaged switch.
    As an aside, I'm considering changing this set up so that the modem plugs into a Time Capsule and the server will connect directly into the TC. The desktops will then run into the server via the unmanaged switch or wirelessly via TC - any thoughts on the best set up here? Are cables into a switch better/worse than using TC's wireless facility.
    Is this something that I, as a reasonably competent computer operator but definitely not an IT expert, could do, or should I get someone in to set it up for me?
    Thanks in advance
    Jim

    VPNs aren't particularly special or weird or secret or such.  They're "just" a network connection.  A sometimes very fussy network connection, but a network connection.
    My preference is to use a firewall that includes an embedded VPN server.  This for several reasons, as it avoids trying to forward the VPN through a device that's using NAT [1], and it means you can connect to multiple devices on the target LAN, and you can connect even if the OS X Server box is down.
    Other folks will forward the VPN through NAT, and use the VPN server that's available in various versions of OS X Server.
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    In various cases everything connects and works the first time, and in other cases it's trial-and-error.
    With a VPN-capable firewall (which is a step above your average residential firewall), usually configuring the firewall as a L2TP server or the Cisco protocol, if you want to use the standard OS X or iOS clients.  Or PPTP — which is easier to get working — but less secure.  Once the firewall and the VPN server is set up — and that's where most of the "fun" is — then the set-up in Network Preferences is (usually) pretty simple.
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    As for this case, satellite latency is large.  The latency involved is the time it takes to the command or the text from your local Mac to the satellite ~35,786 kilometers up and then ~35,786 kilometers back down, and then the response back again.  That's about a quarter second, each way, at the speed of light.  Transferring big files is fine (once the connection is open and the transfer gets rolling), but anything interactive — such as a typical use of a VPN — is going to have a noticable lag.
    Yes, it'll be easiest to get somebody to work through your requirements and expectations, and initially set this up for you.  Or you can use this as an opportunity to read about and learn more about IP routing and networking and VPNs, too.
    [1] VPNs seek to ensure that the network connection is secure, and from a known client IP source address to the IP address of the target VPN server.  NAT explicitly obscures the network connections, and often has multiple client hosts located behind one IP address.   Put another way, the VPN and NAT software implementations are working at cross-purposes.

  • Can I revert back to Snow Leopard after upgrading to Lion?

    I would like to install Lion over my current Snow Leopard 10.6.8 installation but I have some concerns that I may not like it.  If for some reason, I want to revert back to SL, can I use a Time Machine backup to return to my former OS?

    Yes.  Just boot up from your Snow Leopard DVD, and restore the last Time Machine backup that was made before you installed Lion.

  • How to sync kalendar with goolge calendar automatically after upgrading to mountain lion?

    Hello,
    after upgrading to OS X Moutain Lion on my MacBook Pro the calendar is not automatically syncronised with my google caledar even the account is set up properly. It seems the calendar has no contact at all my google account. It still works on my Iphone and Ipad.
    What can I do?
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    Christian

    When I purchased a new MacBook Pro a couple of months ago or so, I used an external firewire drive that I use for backup purposes to transfer my iTunes library from my PowerBook to my MacBook Pro. I copied the iTunes named folder at Home > Music and with iTunes quit on my MBP, I placed the copy in the same location on my MBP at Home > Music.
    I transferred nothing else and my iPhone was not erased of all iTunes content the first time I synced my iPhone with iTunes on my MBP. 3rd party apps are stored in a Mobile Applications named folder located in the iTunes folder.

  • After upgrading to Mountain lion the hyperlink button is not seen in Preview.  Anyone knows ho to get it back?

    After upgrading to Mountain lion the hyperlink button is not seen in Preview.  Anyone knows ho to get it back?

    Augend wrote:
    After upgrading to Mountain lion the hyperlink button is not seen in Preview.  Anyone knows ho to get it back?
    There have been a few threads about this.  The feature seems to have gone missing in Mountain Lion even though the Help for Preview still mentions it.
    I've filed a bug report on it.
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  • How can I go back to snow leopard my epson stylus Photo TX810FW does not work with Lion

    My Epson Stylus Photo TX810FW printer does not work with Lion how do I go back to Snow Leopard?

    Did you try removing the printer from the queue and then reinstalling it?
    I attempted to print this morning for the first time after upgrading to Lion and discovered that while everything appeared normal on my Epson printer, it would never print.
    I opened System Preference > Print & Scan and deleted the printer.
    I then added the printer back and it now working again. Worth a shoot first I should think.
    Much easier the a downgrade.
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  • How do i downgrade back to snow leopard from Lion?

    Having installed Lion on my MBP I have realised there are too many incompatibilities for me to work effectively at present.
    How do I downgrade back to Snow Leopard without losing data?
    I have a full TimeMachine backup and OS X disc that came with the machine. I am concerned that email data has been converted.
    When will we see Lion work with all MS Office Apps, AutoCAD and SL Server?
    h

    https://discussions.apple.com/message/15706096#15706096

  • How do I go back to Snow Leopard from Mavericks (10.6.3 from 10.9.4)

    How do I go back to Snow Leopard from Mavericks (10.6.3 from 10.9.4)

    No easy way.
    If you have no backup of your previous system and data, you basically have to erase your  Mac's internal hard drive and install OS X Snow Leopard from scratch as a clean install and run all software updates as well as reinstall all of your applications and any updates.
    You will now need some way of backing up all of your important data. Backup data to CD/DVD, large capacity USB flash drive OR an external hard drive.
    If you have/had an external hard drive with a complete, copy (cloned ) backup of your previous system, then the doing is/was a lot quicker and simpler.

  • How do you switch back to snow leopard, lion is crap?

    How do tou switch back to snow leopard? Lion is crap, so dissapointed.

    Keep the inflamatory comments down or the thread will disappear, as long as your questions are supported related it's fine.
    Here's how to go back to Snow.
    How can I uninstall OS X Lion and go back to Snow Leopard?
    1: Copy your user file folders (Documents, Pictures, Movies, Music, not Library) to a external blank Disk Utility formatted HFS drive (not TimeMachine) and disconnect all drives. Make a note of your username and hard drive name. Write down any essential information like passwords stored in keychains and product serial keys.
    2: Stick the 10.6 installer disk into the machine and reboot holding the c key down. Second screen in choose Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.
    3: On the left select the hard drive makers name of your internal boot drive (important) then click Erase and Erase... button (if you want to wipe the drive of all lingering data then choose Security Option>Zero all data) when choosing a name for the drive, use the same drive name as before.
    4: Quit and install 10.6, then go through setup, reboot and use the same user name as before. Software Update, install programs from fresh sources (enter any serial keys) Hold Option and click on Purchases in AppStore to redownload (not Lion of course) and then finally return user files to their respective folders on the Snow Leopard drive.
    5: If you have issues with iPhoto, you can right click on the iPhoto Library and "Show Package contents" and in there is a folder with all your originals. Copy them out and delete the iPhoto Library and reboot, restart iPhoto and it should be recreated, which you can then import your copied originals again.
    Note: using the same drive and user name as before, returning files exactly into their respective Music, Documents and Pictures folders like before matches any pathnames some files like iTunes has to the location of your files. If not done, then exclamation points will occur in iTunes when you click on a song. The iTunes Library will have to be opened in Text Edit and all the partial pathnames "find and replace" corrected to repair.
    Optional, but recommended.
    Ideally it's best to first Carbon Copy Cloner the 10.7 internal to another blank external HFS drive before doing the above steps 1-5 as that way you have a copy of everything in case you missed something or you need to hold option boot from the 10.7 clone. The clone can later be erased and used as a 10.6 clone. Or reversed cloned back onto the internal drive or as many external drives as needed. (don't boot a clone on a different Mac, you can access the files though)
    Clones are hold option key bootable, TimeMachines drives are not.
    Note: The above steps are ONLY for Mac's that didn't come with Lion preinstalled. For reverting a factory Lion to Snow Leopard requires other methods.

  • How do I partition my MacBook Pro so I can keep Snow Leopard and also install Mountain Lion?

    How do I partition my MacBook Pro so I can keep Snow Leopard and also install Mountain Lion?
    I want to install the latest OS, but I already know that I will lose a lot of my software unless I can partition the hard drive and have two "bootable" drives.
    How do I retain everything I have, partition the drive, then reloa the software I own according to which OS it will work under?

    msmedia wrote:
    I do not currently own OS X ML.
    I am currently running OS X (10.6.8 Snow Leopard) on my MacBook Pro. It has a 2.8GHz Intel Core 2 Duo Processor. I want to upgrade to Mountain Lion, but many of my software titles will not operate with ML and I cannot afford to replace some of them (Adobe Creative Suite, for e.g.)
    After I back-up my HD and then partition the HD, how do I use the back-up to reinstall what I want to the SL partition, and then place the rest on the ML partition.
    I have not done what you want to do, so can only offer some general thoughts in support. Take value from the following where you can. No guarantees.
    If it was me, I would use a disk clone utility (e.g. Carbon Copy Cloner) to image the existing Snow Leopard disk to an external drive. Then verify that the external drive would boot and run Snow Leopard normally.
    I would then purchase and download the Mountain Lion upgrade installer, but not run it. Use Lion Diskmaker to make a bootable USB stick, and perform a clean install of Mountain Lion, replacing the Snow Leopard on your MBP. This way, you make absolutely certain that no third-party drivers or other SL cruft remains to make Mountain Lion unstable. Update to latest ML point release. Fix permissions. Let TimeMachine make a full backup of your ML installation to a different external drive. Then turn of Time Machine.
    In Disk Utility, use the + sign at the bottom of the ML partition to add another GUID, HFS+ Journaled partition for Snow Leopard. Resize to taste. Name it differently from your ML partition. Exhale.
    Now ideally, you would like to reverse the external clone and put it back into the new SL partition. Then fix permissions. And demonstrate that you can boot into individually stable OS X installations. This would save you alot of work. Resist copying your home directory into ML just yet.
    If you cannot successfully achieve the preceding paragraph, you will be faced with a full SL and application reinstall.
    The ~/Library contents for SL and ML are sufficiently different that you do not want to mix them. You may want to salvage Safari bookmarks.plist. And, ML created folders in the home directory may have different permissions or ACL settings than in SL. So, my rule of thumb would be to copy folders that you created in SL, and only the contents of matching named OS created folders such as Music, Pictures, Downloads, etc.
    For each operating system, you probably want the Time Machine settings to exclude the opposite OS X partition. If you use the same host name in Sharing prefs, then you will mix SL and ML backups on the same Time Machine back up drive. If you use different host names, they will be distinct folders in the Time Machine backups.backupdb and allow discrete restores per host. You may also want to gag Spotlight from indexing the opposite OS X partition.

  • I need to upgrade from Snow Leopard.  I want Mountain Lion, but says I need 10.7 Lion first.  How do I buy this?

    I need to upgrade from Snow Leopard.  I want Mountain Lion, but apparently I need 10.7 Lion first.  How do I buy this? It is not available in the App Store.

    Update Snow Leopard to  10.6 Snow Leopard  to 10.6.8.
    Download OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion and install it.
    Mountain Lion system requirements.
    http://www.apple.com/osx/specs/
    Fore more info:
    http://www.macworld.com/article/1167855/installing_mountain_lion_what_you_need_t o_know.html

  • HELP!! i have a ton of videos of my boys stored in iPhoto..They played fine on my old OSX system (leopard).  However, I just upgraded to snow leopard and then to mountain lion and now i can't open my videos at all anymore.  HELP!!

    HELP!! i have a ton of videos of my boys stored in iPhoto..They played fine on my old OSX system (leopard).  However, I just upgraded to snow leopard and then to mountain lion and now i can't open my videos at all anymore.  HELP!!

    Can you tell us about one or more of the video files - what are they?  QuickTime?  MP4?  Something else?  How did you create the video files in the first place?
    I do a lot of video and when I upgraded to Snow Leopard I discovered that many of the QT videos that I had created previously (via iMovie & Final Cut) would not play correctly in QuickTime X - the bizarre behavior was that QT X acted as if my video files were only audio files!  I reported this to Apple at the time but never heard anything back, and there hasn't been any change in later updates to QT X.
    The solution was to (re)install QuickTime 7.  But first look in your Applications > Utilities folder.  When you upgrade from Leopard to Snow Leopard, the installer normally moves the old QT 7 program to your Utilities folder.  If it's there, try using QT 7 to play one of your video files.    If QT 7 is not there, you can download and install it from here  Make sure you are running at least OS X 10.6.3 before you install QT 7.  It's even better if you make sure you are running 10.6.8 which was the last release of Snow Leopard.

  • I upgraded my Mac from OSX 10.5.8 to Snow Leopard and then to Mountain Lion 10.8.2.  I did have Microsoft Office for Mac 2004 in my applications and now get a message "can't open Office because Power PC applications are no longer supported."

    I just upgraded my MAC from OSX 10.5.8 to Snow Leopard and then to Mountain Lion 10.8.2.  When I try to access my Microsoft Office for MAC (2004 edition) files I am getting a message "can't open Office because Power PC applications are no longer supported.  How can I access all of my save Word documents?  I just want to be able to retrieve all of my documents that were in Microsoft Office for Mac (2004).  If I purchase the newest version of MS office for Mac from Apple will I be able to retrieve my old documents?

    Use any number of free alternatives to your nearly decade old version of MS Office.
    Consider
    LibreOffice (donation-supported)
    NeoOffice (free)
    OpenOffice (free)
    In addition to the above I also recommend Apple's Pages ($19.99). I use OpenOffice and Pages and have been completely Microsoft - free for years. Life is better without Microsoft.

  • I have 10.5.8 and want to upgrade, Do I have to download Snow Leopard before download the Mountain Lion?

    I have 10.5.8 and want to upgrade, Do I have to download Snow Leopard before download the Mountain Lion?

    Upgrade Paths to Snow Leopard, Lion, and/or Mountain Lion
    You can upgrade to Mountain Lion from Lion or directly from Snow Leopard. Mountain Lion can be downloaded from the Mac App Store for $19.99. To access the App Store you must have Snow Leopard 10.6.6 or later installed.
    Upgrading to Snow Leopard
    You must purchase Snow Leopard through the Apple Store: Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard - Apple Store (U.S.). The price is $19.99 plus tax. You will be sent physical media by mail after placing your order.
    After you install Snow Leopard you will have to download and install the Mac OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1 to update Snow Leopard to 10.6.8 and give you access to the App Store. Access to the App Store enables you to download Mountain Lion if your computer meets the requirements.
         Snow Leopard General Requirements
           1. Mac computer with an Intel processor
           2. 1GB of memory
           3. 5GB of available disk space
           4. DVD drive for installation
           5. Some features require a compatible Internet service provider;
               fees may apply.
           6. Some features require Apple’s MobileMe service; fees and
               terms apply.
    Upgrading to Lion
    If your computer does not meet the requirements to install Mountain Lion, it may still meet the requirements to install Lion.
    You can purchase Lion by contacting Customer Service: Contacting Apple for support and service - this includes international calling numbers. The cost is $19.99 (as it was before) plus tax.  It's a download. You will get an email containing a redemption code that you then use at the Mac App Store to download Lion. Save a copy of that installer to your Downloads folder because the installer deletes itself at the end of the installation.
         Lion System Requirements
           1. Mac computer with an Intel Core 2 Duo, Core i3, Core i5, Core i7,
               or Xeon processor
           2. 2GB of memory
           3. OS X v10.6.6 or later (v10.6.8 recommended)
           4. 7GB of available space
           5. Some features require an Apple ID; terms apply.
    Upgrading to Mountain Lion
    To upgrade to Mountain Lion you must have Snow Leopard 10.6.8 or Lion installed. Purchase and download Mountain Lion from the App Store. Sign in using your Apple ID. Mountain Lion is $19.99 plus tax. The file is quite large, over 4 GBs, so allow some time to download. It would be preferable to use Ethernet because it is nearly four times faster than wireless.
         OS X Mountain Lion - System Requirements
           Macs that can be upgraded to OS X Mountain Lion
             1. iMac (Mid 2007 or newer) - Model Identifier 7,1 or later
             2. MacBook (Late 2008 Aluminum, or Early 2009 or newer) - Model Identifier 5,1 or later
             3. MacBook Pro (Mid/Late 2007 or newer) - Model Identifier 3,1 or later
             4. MacBook Air (Late 2008 or newer) - Model Identifier 2,1 or later
             5. Mac mini (Early 2009 or newer) - Model Identifier 3,1 or later
             6. Mac Pro (Early 2008 or newer) - Model Identifier 3,1 or later
             7. Xserve (Early 2009) - Model Identifier 3,1 or later
    To find the model identifier open System Profiler in the Utilities folder. It's displayed in the panel on the right.
         Are my applications compatible?
             See App Compatibility Table - RoaringApps.
         For a complete How-To introduction from Apple see Upgrade to OS X Mountain Lion.

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