Install and time machine

When I restarted my computer last week I lost much - two user accounts, my email, my photos and pretty well everything I had added to the orginal iMac. I took it to the apple store and they used Time machine from my back up hard drive to my computer again. Tonight the same thing happened. I shut down and restarted and only the admin account appears andwhen that is opened all my files are again gone. I can't afford to go back to the techie once each week. What can I do to be able to reboot and still have the current desktop etc.each time.

It's time for Apple to fess up and admit that Leopard, while great in potential, was rushed out prematurely. I've never seen so many forums dealing with OS-X failures like we see with Leopard.
It's a complete mess. I guess all those engineers shouldn't have been pulled to rush iPhone out the door prematurely too.
Not one--NOT ONE product that Apple let out this year was correct out of the gate. ****, they couldn't even get a freakin' keyboard right!!
Bad Apple, Bad.
I used to be unabashedly proud to recommend to people that they give Apple a close look before buying a computer. I'd be out of my mind to recommend Apple again until they get off this self-destructive, kamikaze trajectory. They have absolutely exceeded their capabilities for quality product development, and are no better than Microsoft.

Similar Messages

  • Hard Drive Erase, Clean Install and Time Machine

    I am currently running OS X 10.10.3 and I want to do a clean install. All my content is backed up with Time Machine via external drive.
    First, how do I erase my hard drive and install a fresh version of OS X 10.10.3?
    Second, is it better to use a USB drive for the clean install or just you the Recovery Mode?
    Last, once i finally have a clean installation of OS X 10.10.3, am i able to access my external drive via time machine to bring back some of my old files...i have read that the folder in the external drive is not accessible and not accessible through time machine.
    I appreciate the response and guidance!

    Hello Jacob,
    All of these are good questions to have when erasing and installing OS X Yosemite. To answer your first question you would need to boot to either your Recovery HD or through the Recovery USB and follow the steps in the first article below. Either option will get the task accomplished and will install OS X Yosemite. For your final question about restoring from a Time Machine back up, you will see the option to restore when going through the setup process of your Mac. Let me know if the information below is of help or need further assistance. 
    OS X Yosemite: Erase and reinstall OS X
    https://support.apple.com/kb/PH18869
    OS X: About Recovery Disk Assistant
    https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT202294
    OS X Yosemite: Recover your entire system
    https://support.apple.com/kb/PH18848
    Take it easy,
    -Norm G. 

  • Fresh Leopard Install and Time Machine

    Leopard has been a miserable experience on my Imac 1.8Ghz G5. It has played havoc with the fan management and constantly overheats causing an abrupt switching off with a “pop” (presumably a safety feature). I am planning a completely fresh Leopard install on a wiped hard drive (which was not done originally). What folders or files should I NOT back up in Time Machine so that none of my previous system is restored. Basically I want everything back as it is now, Apps, e-mails, bookmarks etc. but a completely fresh system. Presumably I need to restore the Library folder, but is there anything in the System folder that I will need to restore? I have done an Archive and Install before, but that has not helped. I have reset the PRAM and SMC also. Looking at various Boards, fan problems are commonplace. I hoped that the first update would sort this out, but it didn't. A fresh install seems a reasonable next step. Any advice would be appreciated.

    It's time for Apple to fess up and admit that Leopard, while great in potential, was rushed out prematurely. I've never seen so many forums dealing with OS-X failures like we see with Leopard.
    It's a complete mess. I guess all those engineers shouldn't have been pulled to rush iPhone out the door prematurely too.
    Not one--NOT ONE product that Apple let out this year was correct out of the gate. ****, they couldn't even get a freakin' keyboard right!!
    Bad Apple, Bad.
    I used to be unabashedly proud to recommend to people that they give Apple a close look before buying a computer. I'd be out of my mind to recommend Apple again until they get off this self-destructive, kamikaze trajectory. They have absolutely exceeded their capabilities for quality product development, and are no better than Microsoft.

  • Mavericks install and Time Machine backup disk

    Anyone come across this?
    Trying to install Mavericks and get the message :
    This disk is used for Time Machine Backups
    This is my Macbook Pro Hard Drive and my time machine backups are saved to an external drive which was not connected when I was trying to install Mavericks
    Currently running 10.7.5

    The requirements for Mountain Lion are:
    OS X v10.6.8 or later
    2GB of memory
    8GB of available space
      and the supported models are:
    iMac (Mid 2007 or newer)
    MacBook (Late 2008 Aluminum, or Early 2009 or newer)
    MacBook Pro (Mid/Late 2007 or newer)
    Xserve (Early 2009)
    MacBook Air (Late 2008 or newer)
    Mac mini (Early 2009 or newer)
    Mac Pro (Early 2008 or newer)
    If your machine does not comply with these requirements you may be able to install Lion, for which the requirements are:
    Mac computer with an Intel Core 2 Duo, Core i3, Core i5, Core i7, or Xeon processor
    2GB of memory
    OS X v10.6.6 or later (v10.6.8 recommended)
    7GB of available space
    Lion is available in the Online Apple Store ($19.99) (you will get a code enabling you to download it from the Mac App Store).
    You should be aware that PPC programs (such as AppleWorks) will not run on Lion or above; and some other applications may not be compatible - there is a useful compatibility checklist at http://roaringapps.com/apps:table

  • Clean install and time machine

    I'd like to reformat my hard drive and do a clean install of leopard. I've backed up my drive with time machine and I'm wondering if it is possible to recover all my third party applications etc etc including passwords and settings without having to reinstall them all from the original discs?

    Hello Jacob,
    All of these are good questions to have when erasing and installing OS X Yosemite. To answer your first question you would need to boot to either your Recovery HD or through the Recovery USB and follow the steps in the first article below. Either option will get the task accomplished and will install OS X Yosemite. For your final question about restoring from a Time Machine back up, you will see the option to restore when going through the setup process of your Mac. Let me know if the information below is of help or need further assistance. 
    OS X Yosemite: Erase and reinstall OS X
    https://support.apple.com/kb/PH18869
    OS X: About Recovery Disk Assistant
    https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT202294
    OS X Yosemite: Recover your entire system
    https://support.apple.com/kb/PH18848
    Take it easy,
    -Norm G. 

  • Mavericks install and Time Machine

    Hi all,
    Running 10.6.8 Snow Leopard and going to install Mavericks. Current system and backups are good. Running Time Machine and also FileVault is enabled.
    Want to know what I need to do (or not to do) so Time Machine can continue backing up right where it left off on Snow Leopard when I install Mavericks.
    Is that possible or do I need to start a whole new TM backup with Mavericks?
    Any help/thoughts on this or related to it are very welcome!
    Thanks

    Hi Alain,
    I see you never got a reply to this, but I'm wondering what you finally did? I have very similar questions, but I'm "upgrading" from 10.6.8 Snow Leopard. I also have FileVault activated and use a Time Machine backup. Any comments/suggestions/experience you (or others) would like to share would be helpful.
    Thanks

  • Combine fresh system install and Time Machine Backup

    Hi all !
    There´s a question that´s more generally Leopard and Snow Leopard related:
    In trying to find causes of a system slowdown I decided to go for a complete fresh system install. BUT I also want to use my data saved in the time machine backup without spoiling the freshly created system folder.
    I also want to update the system to the current OS version before restoring from BU.
    Is there a way to keep the fresh system folder deriving from a fresh installation and just replace the rest of the data (that´s not present yet) with the time machine backup ?
    I think the handy command "Restore System from Backup" from the OSX system installer wouldnt be a good idea. It would copy ALL the files from the backup, and would overwrite my fresh system folder, so that I´ll end up with the same old, probably faulty system.
    Could the migration tool do the job ?
    Thanks for your knowledge !

    habschi2 wrote:
    In trying to find causes of a system slowdown I decided to go for a complete fresh system install. BUT I also want to use my data saved in the time machine >backup without spoiling the freshly created system folder.
    You should be able to migrate, for example, just your data using TM. But, TM is a bit unpredictable. Why not make a bootable clone of your internal on an external. It would serve fail-safe purposes, migrations purposes, and data-backup purposes. At the end of your install, you could, as groups only, migrate your data, users, settings, and apps--using your discretion. I would migrate only my data and my settings.
    Is there a way to keep the fresh system folder deriving from a fresh installation and just replace the rest of the data (that´s not present yet) with >the time machine backup ?
    See above.
    I think the handy command "Restore System from Backup" from the OSX system installer wouldnt be a good idea. It would copy ALL the files from the backup, and would overwrite my fresh system folder, so that I´ll end up with the same >old, probably faulty system.
    Absolutely correct.
    Could the migration tool do the job ?
    You can use Migration Assistant with TM, but I have never done so. So, I can't advise. The clone I mentioned takes care of all you issues in a very straight forward manner without dealing with the confusion of TM and MA that can arise.
    (8878)

  • Cannot sync my iphone to imac after new hard drive install and time machine restore. Does not see device

    Had a new hard drive installed
    IMAC does not see iphone therefore cannot sync

    Did you already try these suggetions?
    iOS: Device not recognized in iTunes for Mac OS X

  • After install of Lion, secondary internal hard drive used for backup and time machine is not showing on the desktop.

    After an install of Lion, my secondary internal hard drive used for backup and time machine is not showing on the desktop. Cannot be located with Disk Utility either. Contains vital files! please help...

    I have a TB internal drive, but this is what it shows for memory slots:
    Memory Slots:
      ECC:    Enabled
    DIMM Riser B/DIMM 1:
      Size:    2 GB
      Type:    DDR2 FB-DIMM
      Speed:    800 MHz
      Status:    OK
      Manufacturer:    0x0000
      Part Number:    0x000000463732353642363145353830304600
      Serial Number:    0x00000000
    DIMM Riser B/DIMM 2:
      Size:    2 GB
      Type:    DDR2 FB-DIMM
      Speed:    800 MHz
      Status:    OK
      Manufacturer:    0x0000
      Part Number:    0x000000463732353642363145353830304600
      Serial Number:    0x00000000
    DIMM Riser A/DIMM 1:
      Size:    1 GB
      Type:    DDR2 FB-DIMM
      Speed:    800 MHz
      Status:    OK
      Manufacturer:    0x80AD
      Part Number:    0x48594D5035313241373243503844332D5335
      Serial Number:    0x42076007
    DIMM Riser A/DIMM 2:
      Size:    1 GB
      Type:    DDR2 FB-DIMM
      Speed:    800 MHz
      Status:    OK
      Manufacturer:    0x80AD
      Part Number:    0x48594D5035313241373243503844332D5335
      Serial Number:    0x4207631E
    DIMM Riser B/DIMM 3:
      Size:    Empty
      Type:    Empty
      Speed:    Empty
      Status:    Empty
      Manufacturer:    Empty
      Part Number:    Empty
      Serial Number:    Empty
    DIMM Riser B/DIMM 4:
      Size:    Empty
      Type:    Empty
      Speed:    Empty
      Status:    Empty
      Manufacturer:    Empty
      Part Number:    Empty
      Serial Number:    Empty
    DIMM Riser A/DIMM 3:
      Size:    Empty
      Type:    Empty
      Speed:    Empty
      Status:    Empty
      Manufacturer:    Empty
      Part Number:    Empty
      Serial Number:    Empty
    DIMM Riser A/DIMM 4:
      Size:    Empty
      Type:    Empty
      Speed:    Empty
      Status:    Empty
      Manufacturer:    Empty
      Part Number:    Empty
      Serial Number:    Empty

  • Time Capsule and time machine with third party router

    Hi,
    This is the first time I use this site.
    I have over three years old Mackbook.
    APP has expired.
    Now I want to know how to set up time capsule in a new environment.
    I moved from Australian and Singapore.
    I was using Time Capsule and Airport Extreme in Australia.
    I have moved to Singapore.
    I am using router provided by Singtell(Singapore Telecommunication). I do not have an Airport Extreme anymore. My housemate and I are using wireless internet-sharing. Needless to say that internet provider is SingTell.
    Now I would like to know how to use time capsule and time machine with the network created with a router provided by SingTell.
    What I did so far is;
    Connected the time capsule to the power point.
    Orange lamp lit and flashed for a few second and stop. Orange lamp stayed on.
    Apple Utility does not recognise Time Capsule.
    I prefer to use it wirelessly.
    There are only two USB cable ports installed.
    One is used to synchronize iPhone.
    Other is used for a printer.
    but if it is not possible, wired would be OK.
    MacBook 13 inch 2.0 GH Late 2006
    I hope that someone able to give me an answer for this.
    Cheers,
    morepubholidays

    In this case the apple support people reveal a truly poor understanding.
    You must bridge something.. you either bridge the TC.. which 90% of people do.. or you bridge the dsl router.. which some people do manage to do.. You will have to look that up for your modem and check with verizon if they support pppoe authentication.
    IMHO just bridge the TC as you were told not to do.. as they are simply wrong about that.
    If you already tried this and it didn't work.. try again.. it is the correct approach.
    You have no choice. But this time let me suggest you do it using the 5.6 airport utility.. as the apple toyland v6 airport utility is likely half your trouble.
    So here is how to get the utility into your computer.
    How to load 5.6 into ML.
    1. Download 5.6 for Lion.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1482
    Click to open the dmg but do not attempt to install the pkg.. it won't work anyway.
    2. Download and install unpkg.
    http://www.timdoug.com/unpkg/
    Run unpkg on the desktop.. it is very simple.. drag the AirPortUtility56.pkg file over to unpkg.. and it will create a new directory of the same name on the desktop.. drill down.. applications utilities .. there lo and behold is Airport utility 5.6 .. drag it to your main utilities directory or just run it from current location.
    You cannot uninstall 6.1 so don't try.. and you cannot or should not run them both at the same time.. so just ignore the toyland version.. the plastic hammer.. and start using 5.6.. a real tool.
    For screen shots see this post.
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4668746?tstart=0
    Then open the manual setup on the 5.6 utility.. go to internet tab. Connection sharing.. off bridged mode.
    Select this and update..
    Then all your IP addresses will be wrong.. I suspect this is where things are going wrong.. and messing you up.
    Once the TC is bridged.. turn off everything and restart.. in correct order.. modem.. TC.. client computers etc. 2min gap between each.

  • "No configured AirPort base stations have been found."  I can see the content of the TimeCapsule's drive in finder and Time Machine but it no longer is making backups. Ideas?

    Bought new TimeCapsule March 2013. Worked fine. Now get "No configured AirPort base stations have been found."  I can see the content of the TimeCapsule's drive in finder and Time Machine but it no longer is making backups. Ideas?

    Make sure that you have AirPort Utility 6.3.1 installed on your Mac.
    AirPort Utility 6.3.1 for Mac - Support - Apple
    Then, power off the entire network...all devices...in any order that you want
    Wait a minute, then start the modem first and let it run a full minute
    Start the next device connected to the modem, which may be your Time Capsule and let it run a minute
    Keep starting devices one at a time the same way until the entire network is back up
    See if AirPort Utility can "see" the Time Capsule now.
    If yes, try another backup. If you encounter an error message, post back with the exact message.

  • Hard drive both as s startup and Time Machine

    Right now I am using an Iomega 360 GB hard drive for Time Machine. I would like to put a system on the Iomega so I can use it as a start up in case something hapens with my computer's startup. If I do this will it erase the year of Time Machine copies I have on it now?
    Can the system startup and time machine both be on my Iomega hard drive on the same partition" Or should I have 2 hard drives. One for Time Machine and the other for the system startup?
    I'm just a little freaked out because of the trouble I have had with installing Z.6.

    360GB is kind of small for a Time Machine drive already (unless the data you are backing up is something like 160GB), so you may not want to install additional stuff on the same drive. However, the Time Machine backup archive is kept in its own folder, so you can put other data on the same drive, including a system installation.
    If you are installing Leopard, as long as you don't select to run an +Erase and Install+, and there is no existing system on that drive, the installed system will be added to the existing data.
    Ideally, it would be best to have a separate volume that is only used for Time Machine. A volume can be a partition (it does not need to be the whole drive), so you could partition that drive to have a big partition and a small partition (20GB should be enough), and put the emergency startup system on the small partition. If it is for emergency startup, you can Customize the Leopard installation to de-select things you do not need, such as languages, printer drivers, and bundled apps; that will reduce the size of the installation quite a bit. I use an old FireWire-based iPod with a broken screen as my emergency/maintenance startup disk (about 20GB).
    I'm just a little freaked out because of the trouble I have had with installing Z.6.
    Is that X.6 (Snow Leopard)? What trouble are you having?

  • Time Machine Restore Leads to Kernel Panic and Time Machine Inaccuracies

    Last night I had to do a full restore from time machine because I had disturbed system files. So I boot in the OSX disk and run time machine from utilities to a time before I messed things up. After it finishes I restart as the screen prompts me to do and I get in a kernel panic restart cycle.
    So I reinstall snow leopard from the disk, and for some reason instead of being formatted everything appears as it did at the beginning of summer (I've had Snow Leopard since it came out). So I boot in the disk and try a time machine full restore to a different backup, and after it completes I again get into the kernel panic restart cycle.
    So I reinstall snow leopard to the same effect, thinking I'll just go into time machine (star wars interface) and manually update all the important files, but even though I have regular updates that run all the way to may, they are inaccurate. For instance: my downloads folder remains identical in all of them, even though it is altered almost daily, also my documents don't change: for instance an essay I'm working on doesn't contain changes which I made and through all of the time machine backups has not been modified since may 10th (quite wrong). But oddly, programs which I had installed recently remain on the computer.
    Disk Utility and Disk Warrior both report my internal hard drive and my external hard drive (where the time machine backups are stored in their own partition) are intact.
    All I want is data restoration, and none of my methods have worked.... if there is a workaround to my time machine kernel panic issue and time machine would give an accurate restoration then I would do this... hopefully some of you have ideas... Thanks.
    Running:
    Macbook 2.13 Ghz
    2 gb ram
    was running the most recent edition of Snow Leopard, after restore I'm running the original OSX 10.6

    You might try the following to repair permissions in your Home folder. Disk Utility does not repair permissions in the Home folder.
    To fix Home folder permissions
    Open the Terminal application in the Utilities folder. At the command line prompt enter or paste the following command line:
    sudo chown -R `id -un`:`id -gn` ~
    Press RETURN. You will be prompted to enter your admin password which will not be echoed.

  • External Boot drive and time machine?

    Been away from the mac/s for awhile... Just recieved my new mac mini hooked up to an external drive, in this case a very nice mini stack V2 with 500GB and more importantly 7200RPM drive. When I first turned on Leopard I of course designated the external drive as my backup for time machine.
    That done can I still use the external drive as a bootable drive? I want to gain the increase in performance from that hard drive by doing so.
    If YES I just install my OS on to that drive and then once done select it as my boot drive in system preferences? Any help appreciated.

    I'm not sure you would want to have a backup to the same drive you boot the system from, and Time Machine won't give you the option to select the same partition your boot copy of MacOS is in. You may be able to repartition the drive into two (or more) logical drives and do it that way, but realistically to get the best performance from the system you'd probably want to use the external not just as the boot drive, but also for data storage. That being so, you clearly wouldn't gain any real benefit backing up to the same drive even if you could do so, so you might perhaps instead designate the mini's internal drive for Time Machine use, or add a second external and designate that.

  • Question re: upgrading to OS 10.6.2 and Time Machine settings

    Hello all - and Happy New Year.
    A friend of mine who received a Mac Air for Christmas also received an Apple Time Machine to go with it. (I have to say that he is loving the Mac!)
    When we (I) tried to install the Time Machine for him we ran into a lot of problems. Specifically, he is the director of a school and is using his Mac on a LAN that is fairly well restricted and "fire-walled" for a variety of security reasons. This made it impossible for me to get the wireless portion of the Time Machine working properly. We finally called the administrator of the LAN and explained the problem. Without getting into details - he was able to configure the Air Port to have access to 4 static IP addresses: 1 for the Time Machine and 3 others that Time Machine can allow other devices to use (specifically, the Mac Air, my friend's iPhone, and a guest).
    Now, after hearing about the benefits of upgrading to Snow Leopard, my friend would like to go with the upgrade.
    My question is this: Is there a risk that all the hard work that we went through to configure Time Machine will be wiped away? In other words, will the upgrade process save this configuration or will we have to call the LAN administrator once again to set it up?
    Any assistance would be welcome.
    Thanks,
    Mike

    Thanks, I appreciate your assistance.
    The OS version that he is using reads 10.5.8. Yes, I agree that it should already have Snow Leopard installed - perhaps he received an upgrade disk as well with the computer. I'll have to check that out.
    I apologize, I was using the wrong terminology in my original post. The device is a "Time Capsule" that includes a 1TB hard drive and a Wi-Fi base station. The configuration that we went through for the Wi-Fi is what concerns me. As I mentioned in the question, the configuration that we went through to get it to work properly was time consuming (and a bit confusing). I would not want to go through that again if we were to upgrade my friend's computer to 10.6.2.
    If I understand your response correctly the configuration is a software issue and the upgrade should preserve all the settings on the Mac. The settings in the Time Capsule itself should not be affected.
    Thanks again for allowing me to work through this. I appreciate it.
    Take care,
    Mike

Maybe you are looking for

  • SG 2014 w/Matrox MX02 Mini - audio glitch

    With previous version, I could not get SG to display on my external monitor via Matrox - at all. It was not an option. Now with 2014 and the latest Matrox driver, I can output through the Matrox, but the audio is choppy. As if it has latency issues.

  • Raw pointer access to in-memory tables

    Hello, I realize this is quite an odd question, but I was wondering if it's possible to obtain raw pointers to rows stored in an in-memory table introduced in SQL Server 2014. What I am trying to do is to use AMD Kaveri APU in conjunction with SQL Se

  • Best wireless router for iMac G5 and MacPro?

    Hi I am looking for a router to connect the following to a network: iMac G5 with Airport Extreme MacPro (Ethernet, wired connection) The broadband connection speed is 8 Mb/s. I also want the option to add a (Windows) laptop to the network (wirelessly

  • Depreciation Posting Run for Period 02 in 2008

    Dear All, I have closed the 2007 fiscal year for fixed assets and executed the fiscal year change successfully. I have also executed the depreciation run for January period 01 without any errors, however, when I attempted to execute the depreciation

  • Report can't be saved and exported in 64bit Windows server

    Hi, I'm using CR.NET runtime 12 SP2 and developed in Visual Studio 2008 (.NET 3.5) My application is generate report from blank report file and export to PDF file as web response. my code is working good in my 32bit Windows 2003 OS, but it is not wor