How To Boot Snow Leopard Retail DVD

Hello,
Would you be able to help me out with my concern?
Alright, Before we begin I've recently bought Apple's Snow Leopard 10.6 and would like to install it onto my Asus G73Jw Notebook. Currently running,
Windows 7 Home Premium, and would like for you to be able in assisting me with my issue which is quiet simple.
How Can I Install my Apple Snow Leopard Retail DVD onto my Notebook Step by Step would be appreciated.
Thank You
System Specifications:
Windows 7 Home Premium 64Bit
Intel Core i7
Nvidia GTX 460M 1.5GB
6GB Ram

Not comaptible unfortunately.
At least not without some serious work.
Have a look here:
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/how-to-install-mac-os-x-on-a-pc-without-using-a-mac /
-Graham

Similar Messages

  • Booting from a Snow Leopard Retail dvd

    I have a 2009 iMac that came with Leopard installed.  I later purchase the retail Snow Leopard disc with I believe 10.6.3. 
    I want to reformat my iMac HD and reinstall a fresh copy of Snow Leopard so I can move my Mac Pro data over to it, but it doesn't load the Snow Leopard disc when I reboot and hold the Option key.
    I've upgraded to 10.6.8 and was wondering if that was the problem.  I have used the original Leopard Install discs to check the drive and corrected a few errors with one pass.  Should the iMac be able to boot from the SL disc?  Not being able to read the dvd, I can't even attempt a .dmg image to mount, even if I knew how.  I've read numerous posts with other users not being able to boot from the SL retail disc.
    Would I have the same issues if I purchase a new Snow Leopard Install dvd?

    Unlike Windows, the DVD or CD versions of the Mac OS (Snow Leopard or earlier) have no serial number, or even keep track of how many times you've installed it. It's all on the honor system of following the license you have, which as mende1 noted, is either a single computer license, or five in one household (not shared with friends or relatives).
    Lion and Mountain Lion are a bit different. Macs that came with either OS have a machine specific version (for the necessary hardware drivers) and cannot be shared, other than with a 100% identical Mac. The App Store versions are intended for Macs that were released before the respective OS's, and contain only the hardware drivers for the Mac models they are listed to support.

  • HT201364 hi..i have ibookg4 i change the harddrive on it..can u tell me how to boot snow leopard on it..?

    hi

    You cannot boot Snow Leopard on a G4 iBook. Snow Leopard can only be installed on an Intel Mac.
         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 iCloud services; fees and
               terms apply.

  • Can Mac OS X Snow Leopard Retail DVD be used to erase and install on a Leopard 10.5.8?

    Can that retail DVD be used to erase and install on a Leopard 10.5.8?
    Or can you only do that with the discs that came with the computer?

    One pitfall is if you don't have the minimum 1 GB of RAM, Snow Leopard will be very slow to work. Also make sure your hard drive after the installation is less than an arbitrary 85% full.  This amount has been found to be the break even point where all versions of Mac OS X can get messed up. Otherwise, check my FAQ* for other possible compatibility concerns:
    http://www.macmaps.com/upgradefaq.html

  • Snow Leopard retail DVD vs MacPro

    Good afternoon.
    MacPro (2.8QCX/3X1G/1TB/5770)  (MC560LL/A) (mid-2010)
    I received this without a HD (due to proprietary software).
    Will the retail Snow Leopard (marked OS 10.6.3) install fully on a new HD?
    Apple tech support is adament about it working properly.
    Thanks for your time.

    The retail disk is unlikely to work. I have almost the same Mac. It is also a mid 2010 Mac Pro (though mine with the 3.3 GHz CPUs). Like yours, it came with 10.6.4. I've tried the 10.6.3 retail disk with this Mac, and it will not boot to that disk. Per the usual reason, the necessary hardware drivers aren't on the 10.6.3 retail disk since my model was released later. Hence, you need the 10.6.4 gray disks it came with in order to install Snow Leopard.

  • How to Install SNOW LEOPARD by DVD SHARING from WINDOW PLATFORM?

    i need to install SNOW LEOPARD on my LEOPARD running macbook, There is no apple store or imagine store in my town... can u guide me the process i have already installed DVD Sharing application on the WINDOW's system and ENABLED it.... but what is the next Step to go about?

    my macbook throws out the DVD after few spins.... i think it cannot read DVD's or it has become faulty! it would be really helpful if you guide me the process of installing it via DVD sharing.
    Thank you.

  • Lost Snow Leopard Install DVD

    Hi,
    Hope this is the right topic for this question.
    I recently purchased a MacBook Pro 13 inch and I have upgraded the hard drive.
    Only when I wanted to install OS I couldn't find my install DVD.
    I tried installing from a friend's MacBook Air install media. but It dosen't work.
    Can anyone tell me what can I do here to get at least new install media for my macBook Pro?
    Thanks

    You probably need to get replacement discs rather than a retail DVD in any event. If your "recently purchased" MBP is the "mid-2010" model, then the current retail OS X 10.6.3 Snow Leopard Install DVD probably won't work.
    See
    [Don't install a version of Mac OS X earlier than what came with your Mac|http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2186]
    The "build" of the OS version on a retail installer disc can't be older than the build of the OS version that shipped with the computer. The most recent Snow Leopard Retail DVD is OS X 10.6.3, Build 10D575. According to [this page|http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1159?viewlocale=en_US], the earliest OS version that shipped with the mid-2010 model MBPs was OS X 10.6.3, Build 10D2125, which is a later build than the current retail OS X 10.6.3 version.

  • How many Installs Can I do from a Snow Leopard Retail Disk?

    I have an old Snow Leopard Retail Disk (10.6.3) that I used a few years ago. Our Macs have mostly been upgraded to Lion since then, but we still have a 2007 iMac running Leopard and want to run some legacy third-party software. We need to upgrade that iMac from Leopard to Snow Leopard, then upgrade via system update to 10.6.8 in order to run the legacy software.
    I know we used this Snow Leopard retail disk to upgrade one computer to Snow Leopard already, and we might have used the disk to install Snow Leopard on an external hard drive as well but I'm not sure as it was a few years ago and that hard drive may have been archived and placed in storage.
    My question is, is there a limited number of installs that we can do with this disk? Do we need to first uninstall Snow Leopard from one computer before we can install it on another?

    Unlike Windows, the DVD or CD versions of the Mac OS (Snow Leopard or earlier) have no serial number, or even keep track of how many times you've installed it. It's all on the honor system of following the license you have, which as mende1 noted, is either a single computer license, or five in one household (not shared with friends or relatives).
    Lion and Mountain Lion are a bit different. Macs that came with either OS have a machine specific version (for the necessary hardware drivers) and cannot be shared, other than with a 100% identical Mac. The App Store versions are intended for Macs that were released before the respective OS's, and contain only the hardware drivers for the Mac models they are listed to support.

  • How do I get Snow Leopard free Snow Leopard install DVD so I can upgrade to Lion and then be able to join the Cloud.

    How do I get free Snow Leopard install DVD so I can then install LION and move to the Cloud?

    Hi Robert,
    If you are not a mobileme subscriber you will have to buy Snow Leopard install  DVD. It is not free.
    Good luck,
    Alan

  • Windows 7 does not read drivers on my OS Snow Leopard Install dvd

    When I start the DVD and the setup.exe I get 2 options - Remote Install Mac OS X and DVD or CD Sharing, no drivers are being downloaded or appear to be on the DVD.
    Any ideas, please help.

    Ok, after 3 sleepness nights I have found a solution and finally have a working Windows 7 Ultimate. I hope this will be helpful for everyone having similar issues and not have to go through the same nightmare.
    Right away after logging in Windows for the first time insert the original Snow Leopard Install DVD and if Windows does not read it or install any drivers after clicking on setup.exe do the following:
    Right-click on Start » Programs » Accessories » Command Prompt
    Select Run as Administrator
    Type cd /d D:, then press Enter
    Type cd Boot Camp\Drivers\Apple, then press Enter
    Type BootCamp64.msi, then press Enter
    If you do not how to right click before installing the drivers the following:
    Click on Start
    Enter cmd in the search box
    Instead of hitting the Enter key use Ctrl + Shift + Enter and will open a dialog box
    Click Yes at the prompt and you will be running as an administrator.
    If you do not have the original install DVD go the this link and follow the instructions(including the ones from the last comment):
    http://blog.timvalenta.com/2011/11/19/boot-camp-driver-downloads/

  • How to install Snow Leopard on a 2009 Mac Pro which has Mountain Lion?

    The 2009 Mac Pro that I just bought has Mountain Lion. For many reasons, I do not want to have Mountain Lion on my machine. I have been using Snow Leopard for years and I like it fine. I have my Snow Leopard install DVDs. I cannot get this machine to accept Snow Leopard, which must be just another undesirable aspect of Mountain Lion, bacause this machine must have shipped with some variant of Leopard/ Snow Leopard to begin with. Here's what happens when I put the Snow Leopard Install DVD in the Superdrive:
    1) First, I held down the "C" key at startup to start from a disc. It showed me a window which said "Mac OS X can't be installed on this computer".
    2) Then I started it with Mountain Lion and then put in the Snow Leopard DVD. Got a window which said "The disc you inserted was not readable by this computer". It also had 3 buttons to choose from: "Initialize", "Ignore" and "Eject". So I clicked on "Initialize" and Disc Utility opened on the First Aid page. I assume I'm supposed to erase the startup disc, but I thought maybe I should ask the experts here before I do that.
    This machine has two 2TB HDDs that the previous owner has configured as a level 1 RAID. If I am to erase the startup disc do I erase both drives of the RAID set? If I'm not supposed to erase the startup drive, what do I need to do to get back to Snow Leopard? Thanks and thanks again!

    The built-in checks will keep you from clobbering 10.8 Mountain Lion by Installing Snow Leopard over it (literally, 10.6 Snow Leopard Installer will see a later version in place, and knows it cannot install over a later version). So it says "Mac OS X cannot be installed on this computer..." and leaves off "... "in its current state."
    You will need to Install on a 10.6 Snow Leopard-erased drive. Mac OS X Erase function proceeds to install a Partition scheme and a default Volume after erasing, because a truly blank drive is useless for most Users.
    When you boot to the Installer DVD, you are running off the DVD, so all Hard Drives are available to be erased if that is your choice. All data on them will be discarded. If you erase one drive in a mirrored RAID set, normally the other drive would survive and the set would be degraded. But a new version of RAID was introduced right AFTER 10.6, and it is likely that 10.6 cannot read that RAID at all under any circumstances.

  • Attempting Disk repair with Snow Leopard install DVD. Prompted to restart several times

    Hi,
    I'm trying to do a disk repair with my MBP (2010, OS X snow leopard). I tried  to enter Disk Utility with my Snow Leopard install DVD by pressing down "c" during startup but it gives me a grey screen in several languages prompting me to restart again. Restarted and I get the same screen.  Can anyone help me?

    You are getting a (kernel) panic crash booting from the installer dvd?  Hmmm.  That's doesn't sound good.  Try resetting smc and pram.
    If that doesn't fix it try to boot the Apple Hardware Test and check your machine -- assuming that will boot?
    Also look inside if you get that panic crash and see if there are any diagnostic leds lit.
    If this continues you might try disconnecting all unnecessary peripherals (usb, fw, extra drives).

  • 3 Beep when i try to boot Snow Leopard (after memory and sad upgrade)

    Good night,
    I have a Macbook Pro Later 2011 with Yosemite installed and today i tried to upgrade memory and SSD.
    Memory: 16GB 1600MHz DDR3 (2x8) Corsair 11-11-11-30 1.35v
    SSD: Corsair 120GB Sata 3 Force GT
    After installation of my new gear, i tried to install OS X Snow Leopard through DVD and i get this 3 beep when boot start.
    So i reinstalled the original hard drive, keep the new 16gb and started correctly.
    Tried boot DVD again with the original hard drive and new 16gb but the 3 beep continues...
    Then i removed the 16gb, but still doing this 3 beep stuff when i try boot from DVD.
    I tried all combinations with new and old hardware but nothing more works...
    I have changed the slots with both, the 16gb and old 4gb.
    Could be the DVD corrupted?
    Now im running my Yosemite with the original hard drive and the new 16gb memory without any issue.
    Im already do the memory test nothing wrong appear in results
    My configuration:
    MacBook Pro (17 polegadas, Final de 2011)
    Processador 2,4 GHz Omte; Cpre i7
    Memória 16 GB 1600 MHz DDR3
    Gráficos Intel HD Graphics 3000 512 MB
    Could anyone help me plz?
    ps. sorry for my english

    The DVD's too old for that Mac. If you need to install an OS on it, connect it to the Internet and start it up with the Option, Command, and R keys held down.
    (110037)

  • Can I dual boot Snow Leopard and Mountain Lion on one hard drive?

    I want to make a new partition and be able to boot to either OS. Is this possible, if so, how? I would think just make a new partition and install the dmg file to that new partition.

    @jimmyk11: AppleCare has actually informed me that "No - this MacBooPro9,1 cannot boot Snow Leopard".
    It originally came with lion 10.7.4 installed. I have since upgraded to Mountain Lion 10.8 and (today, after a week or so of ML) I reverted to Lion 10.7.4. But now I find I can no longer boot into Lion 10.7.4 from my external FW800 drive (for troubleshooting and housekeeping). So it looks as if the "boot problems" are not confined to Snow Leopard 10.6.8.
    Interestingly, I can use this same external drive to boot my iMac (10.7.4) and my older MBP8,3 (10.8) into 10.7.4 - but not the newer MBP9,1.
    The MBP9,1 with Lion and Mountain Lion is turning into a disaster when it comes to external booting. If I could, I'd demand a return and a refund. After bottle-feeding Lion for a year, 10.7.4 seems basically stable and can still boot into Snow Leopard and Lion from my external drives if needed. But now I see I have a worse problem: Crippled Hardware. I suspect this bug needs a firmware update - if it is fixable at all.

  • Does anybody know how to install Snow Leopard on an external HD with Lion?

    My MacBook Pro came from apple with Lion OS X 10.7.1 installed and it doesn't operate with Pro Tools LE 8.0.5 (or any other version for that matter and PT 9.0.5 is only in beta) So, I'm looking to partition Snow Leopard OS X 10.6 to my external HD so I can bypass the issue without compromising and downgrading my MacBook Pro (which I've been told is not possible anyway but I'm sure there is a way) and having to A) Pay out more money to avid and get PT 9 ( BETA) or B) Run a different DAW (Also costing more $$$) Any help would be MUCH appreciated!!!

    Yes it's possible, you need another Firewire capable Mac#2 that can hold c boot off the 10.6.3 Snow Leopard Retail Disks and a Firewire cable and if necessary a FW 800 to 400 adapter.
    First you boot into Lion on Mac#1 and use Disk Utility to Erase Free Space, this will take a few hours.
    Then backup your data off the Mac#1 Lion partition to a external drive and disconnect. (for safety sake)
    Then you create a second partition on the drive in Disk Utility, formatted OS X Extended (Journaled) under the Partition Tab.
    While that is all going on, on the other Mac#2 that can boot off 10.6.3 disks, you do the same thing,
    First you boot into Snow or Lion on Mac#2 and use Disk Utility to Erase Free Space, this will take a few hours.
    Then backup the data off the Mac#2 main boot partition to a external drive and disconnect. (for safety sake)
    Then you create a second partition on the drive in Disk Utility, formatted OS X Extended (Journaled) under the Partition Tab.
    Hold c and boot Mac#2 off the 10.6.3 Retail Snow Leopard Disk (won't work with grey disks unless it matches the target machine model) and install onto the new partition on Mac#2, reboot holding option key and select the 10.6.3 partition, once in, use the Combo Update to get to 10.6.8. (must do)
    Reboot holding T this Lion Mac#1 so it's in Target Disk Mode, connect the Firewire cable to the other Mac#2, then hold option key and reboot into the second partition on Mac#2. Download and use Carbon Copy Cloner to clone the new partition of Mac#2 to new partition of Mac#1
    Reboot Mac#1 holding option key  to boot into Snow partition on the factory Lion Mac#1.
    If that doesn't work, you need to combine the 10.6.3 and the 10.6.8 Combo Update together in this process at the link below, and apply the 10.6.3 + 10.6.8 combined image in the same Target Disk mode fashion
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3264421?start=0&tstart=0
    Another method is if you can convince Apple to send you the 10.6.6 install disks for your machine, then use the Target Disk Mode approach to circumvent the firmware which is preventing you from booting off install disks from any previous version of OS X.
    For example, my new 2011 MBP came with 10.6.6 grey install disks, but can't boot off the 10.6.3 Snow Leopard Retail Disks.
    Another method would be to find another same exact machine as yours, came with 10.6.6 from the factory (even if upgraded to Lion it should still boot 10.6.6), thus will boot off the 10.6.6 install disks and install it onto your parttion.
    Needless to say, after going through all this, you really need to make a clone of the partition once it's successfully installed.
    Set the startup disk in system preferences to Snow.
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/16276201#16276201

Maybe you are looking for