Leopard 10.5.4 DVD

... Leopard 10.5.4 DVDs are now available for those that need or want it (many Mac Pro owners with upgraded graphics).
http://store.apple.com/us/product/MB576Z/A

Anyone who currently has 10.5 through 10.5.3 can upgrade to 10.5.4 using the update available here:
http://www.apple.com/support/downloads/macosx1054comboupdate.html
The value of having a retail 10.5.4 DVDs include:
1. Those who don't have the prebundled DVD and only need the prebundled software that came with Leopard (that does not include iLife, but does include iTunes).The retail disk also does not include the hardware test software.
2. Those who live far away from an Apple authorized store and are on dialup internet will be able to get the 10.5.4 update on a disc without having to suffer through disconnected downloads.
Regardless, check to make sure your hardware and software has been tested with 10.5.4 before purchasing. If it hasn't but has been tested with earlier versions of 10.5, you may need to find an older retail package, as downgrading is not easy.

Similar Messages

  • Hello, I have a 2009 iMac, and my harddrive has failed several times now, and now I need to re-install snow leopard but my install DVD is damaged and I have bought a new snow leopard disc. However my iMac will not read the disc at all ?

    Hello, I have a 2009 iMac, and my harddrive has failed several times now.
    I tired to reinstall snow leopard with the install DVD that came with my iMac. However the disc is damaged so I bought a new Snow Leopard but my iMac wont read the new disc, it just stays in the apple logo screen, I have tired safe boot, holding down the "C" key on startup and tried using disc utility but getting nowhere.
    Please help. Thanks.

    Might be related, if your hard drive is a 1TB drive,it could be a Seagate drive.
    The drives are known to fail and your iMac maybe covered for free replacement under the Apple's Seagate hard drive replacement program until April 12 of this year.
    I Believe the 2009 models are covered under this replacement warranty.
    You can find out if you are eligible here.
    http://www.apple.com/support/imac-harddrive/
    Good Luck!

  • How to install Leopard from an external DVD reader?

    Hi,
    I've bought Leopard today. unfortunately, it's not yet installed on my PowerBook. As my SuperDrive is dead, I use now an external DVD (Lacie Portable DVD-RW), but it doesn't work. I can read the Leopard install DVD, but when it reboot, it reboot on my current installation.
    I've tried the following during the boot sequence:
    - alt pressed, but I can only see my main HDD
    - c pressed, but I boot on my current installation
    Can you tell me if it is possible to install Leopard from an external DVD, and how can I do that ?
    Thanks in advance.
    Regards,
    Emmanuel Di Pretoro

    Can you tell me if the same problem occur with a FireWire external DVD ?
    It does not occur on your model of Mac.
    (25504)

  • HT1544 Leopard CPU "Drop in" DVD upgrade

    I have a PowerBook G4 (17" HiRes, 1.67GHz Power PC) running Mac OS10.4.11.  I have purchased the Mac OS X Leopard CPU "Drop in" DVD in order to upgrade my system from "Tiger" to "Leopard."
    QUESTION: After I upgrade, what will happen to my current Tiger applications (iDVD, iMovie, DVD player, iPhoto, Preview, etc.)?  Will I need to purchase new applications?  What about movie bookmarks, etc?  Will I need to start from scratch?

    If you have sufficient disk space (either internal or external) it is probably best to put a bootable clone of your existing OS onto a separate disk or partition before you do anything else. In this way you will preserve a working OS that you can return to. Please excuse my standard blurb below - it probably has sufficient information on how to do this.
    Backup first
    It is always best to have a full bootable backup before you upgrade. If you fail to do this you will be unable to return to this OS if you decide you don't like the new OS. Also there is a slight chance that an install could lose everything on the Mac. The backup must be to an external hard disk. Preferably use Carbon Copy Cloner to make a bootable backup of the whole disk.
    Erase before the install
    Once you have a bootable backup on an external disk it is best to erase the internal disk with the new installer DVD before you install.
    During the install
    Preferably do not import any data or preferences from earlier OSs during the install process as this can reintroduce bugs.
    OS numbers and names
    OS X 10.4.x - Tiger
    OS X 10.5.x - Leopard
    OS X 10.6.x - Snow Leopard
    OS X 10.7.x - Lion
    OS X 10.8.x - Mountain Lion
    More about Macs
    The Apple History site has specifications for every Mac ever produced: http://www.apple-history.com/
    Upgrade to Leopard
    Those wishing to upgrade to Leopard should be aware that install disks can be expensive unless you contact Apple. Details: http://lowendmac.com/deals/best-os-x-leopard-prices.html Standard Leopard installers impose several hardware limitations including speed and RAM size but all these restrictions can be overcome. Google for details. Leopard works well at 500 MHz with 1 GB of RAM and many happy users have less than this.
    Upgrade beyond Leopard
    OSs beyond OS X 10.5.8 require an Intel processor. If in doubt check this: Click the apple at the top left of your screen and select 'About this Mac'. This will give you your OS number. Then click 'More Info' to see which processor you have. If it says PowerPC you cannot upgrade to Snow Leopard and above. If you have an Intel Mac it is well worth upgrading to Snow Leopard now and then considering other options after that. You can buy Snow Leopard here: http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC573Z/A
    Upgrade beyond Snow Leopard
    Information about upgrading Snow Leopard to Lion or Mountain Lion: http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD256Z/A
    Important
    Check that your Mac complies with any requirements. If you are not in the US you should use the Change Country link at the bottom of Apple pages.

  • Cpu Drop-in dvdMac OS X Leopard CPU Drop-in DVD.

    Just set up my brand new imac. I thought it would come with Leopard, but not so. It has Tiger. It did come with a disk called - Mac OS X Leopard CPU Drop-in DVD. But when I put in the DVD it pops back out. I tried starting on the DVD, but it pops out too. Should this disk update me to Leopard? Any reason it pops out?

    *Hi rcar, Welcome* to Apple's Users Help Users Forums.
    IMHO be thankful it came w Tiger. Use a partitioned FWHD and put one OS on a partition w the other OS on the Internal HD. The other partition should be rather large for Time Machine. You might consider more partitions for Bootable BUs. TM is not bootable.
    Good Luck, JP

  • Help!  'Leopard CPU Drop-in DVD' Ejecting on Brand new macbook pro

    Hey everyone. I just recieved my highly anticipated Macbook Pro that came preinstalled with OSX 10.4.10. I haven't installed anything yet because i am wanting to install Leopard first. The computer came with the 'Mac OS X Leopard - CPU Drop-in DVD'. After I put the dvd in i have tried to install it 4 different ways. One, just by double clicking the 'Install Mac OS X.app' icon (i've actually tried this about 4 times). Second, I tried to install it by using the Leopard DVD as the start-up disc as described in the 'troubleshooting leopard' doc online. Thirdly, I tried (three times) to restart the computer with the DVD in while holding 'C' down. And finally, my last attempt i installed the Tiger discs thinking that might do it...after i installed Tiger which was already preinstalled on the computer, I repeated the above mentioned methods...and everytime the dvd gets ejected on the restart...a couple seconds after the 'apple logo' appears on bootup...then, the 'not working' icon (circle with the diagonal line through it like 'no smoking' logo) appears.
    help!!! i'm anxious to get Leopard running!!!! i've been dreaming about this computer for about 3 years now.
    any help is appreciated!!!

    ok...i'm not sure how at all...but, a couple hours have passed since i posted this and while i was hoping someone would reply i was finishing up some old work on my old, extremely slow emac. anyways, i decided to go ahead and try to install leopard again from the normal standard method. (which is just clicking the icon once the leopard install window comes up). Guess what? now it's 50% into the installation!! i don't want to count my chickens before they hatch...especially after some of the discussions i've read about leopard so far...but, i'm hopeful
    who knows how...i'm clueless and it doesn't make much sense to me. but, i'll come back and let anyone who cares know how the install went.
    note for anyone with similar problems:
    another strange fix to the 'leopard dvd ejecting on install' is to let the dvd chill in the drive for a couple hours...then try it again. HAHAHAHAHA!!!! worked for me

  • My 1st iMac, need help with the upgrade to Leopard CPU Drop-In DVD

    Hello all, my 1st post as a new Apple switcher!
    I just received my new iMac 24" today, and I am not sure about the upgrade to Leopard. (Came pre-installed with Tiger, and came with a Leopard CPU Drop-In DVD). I have read about a few issues with the upgrade / re-install process to Leopard, stemming from the rumor that the Leopard CPU Drop-In DVD is not a full version, but an upgrade only.
    First of all, obviously I am supposed to put in the "Drop-In DVD" and let it rip, but there are several options to pick from. One of them is upgrade, and another is to erase the hard drive and perform a clean install.
    My questions are:
    If I perform the erase and install, I have heard that iLife 08 will not be installed. If so, where / how do I reinstall that and any other apps that are left out?
    Secondly, in the future, if I need to re-install again, will this "Drop-In DVD" work because Tiger has been removed from the hard drive? Will I just pop in my Tiger disks like the old Windows stuff required?
    I plan on just doing the upgrade, but I would like to know what to do in the future if I have to do an erase / install.
    Thank you, and the iMac 24" is gorgeous!

    Hey, I know what you mean.
    I upgraded to Leopard after buying my first mac with Tiger.
    I rang customer service and asked how do I install iLife 08 if I do a clean instal,l as when i upgraded my Safari would not play flash, quicktime or open certain websites. Also I had a very long load up period with Blue Screen which bothered me a lot. (I know I am fussy)
    Anyway my brother suggested I use Pacifist to get the .pkg files from the Tiger boot disk. He took control of my machine as he has Leopard and did this for me remotely as I am not a wizard like him.
    By the way that is a great feature of Leopard.
    Anyway this worked for me, only iMovie would not start properly but when I download the updates to iLife 08 they all work perfectly now. Saved my 79 euro as well instead of having to buy again as I think iLife should be supplied on a separate disk, (bad form apple) as they know for many a clean install is likely if they experience serious issues upgrading.
    Anyway pacifist http://www.charlessoft.com/ is worth a try if you can't afford to fork out for iLife again like me.
    Just make sure you select all the iLife .pkg files and composer files. when it installs if the files are already there just click leave alone and it will install only what it needs. Then run the updates if you have any issues opening any of the programs such as imovie and this should replace any missing files.
    I have open and run all the iLife programs and so far so good.

  • Restoring Entire System to Earlier Backup with Leopard CPU Drop-in DVD

    After some programs failed in a pernicious manner, I decided to return the entire system to a Time Machine backup made earlier today. Time Machine Help "Recovering your Entire system" seems to be the only relevant help. It says to choose Utilities > Restore System from my Mac OS X Install disc. But I was shipped two Tiger Mac OS X Install Discs and a Leopard CPU Drop-in DVD (updates to Leopard). The Leopard Drop-in does not have Utilities > Restore System and I am reluctant to use either Tiger disc to restore my Leopard system.
    What should I be doing? I hope the answer provides a restore process that is relatively quick because the changes are relatively small.
    Message was edited by: Butterflie14

    Butterflie14,
    The term "delta" doesn't really apply to Time Machine backups. Each backup is a complete "snapshot" of the entire installation. In order to do this without copying over huge amounts of data, Time Machine uses "multi-linked" files in the various backups, all pointing to the same data. That is, with the exception of any new/changed files; these represent the only real data that is transferred during each backup. Only in this sense does "delta" apply.
    Restoring from a backup, at least in the context of "going back to a previous state," is an all-or-nothing proposition. That doesn't mean it has to take a long time. First, the process of erasing a drive takes mere seconds. Second, a Time Machine "Restore" doesn't include a new installation of OS X from the installer disk (which would take a long time), but rather a restoration of the entire system from the backup. As such, it is dependent entirely on the speed of the drive and connecting bus (FW 400, 800, USB, etc.). In the case of my FW 800 drive, a complete "Restore" of a 50 GB system took about 30 minutes.
    I agree, to take this step seems like a waste just to recover from some "pernicious" action of a particular application. If you were a bit more specific about what application we're talking about, and just what it did, perhaps I could offer better advice. You can restore anything that has been backed up by Time Machine, but may have been deleted from your internal disk in the meantime, but you cannot really "un-modify" OS X, if that is what has happened. To do so, you must perform a complete "Restore."
    Scott

  • Can't install Snow Leopard on MacBook Pro - DVD won't mount

    I am unable to install Snow Leopard on my MacBook Pro as the DVD won't mount.  This is an early 2008 vintage MacBook Pro, intel core duo...
    I'm using a OS X Snow Leopard install DVD (family licensed).  This DVD has been used to install 3 other Macs in my house without a problem (about a year ago), but cannot be used to upgrade my MBP.  Actually, this disk mounted on the MBP exactly once - inserted with system up, the disk mounted.  Upon running the installed (a year ago), the computer restarted but hung in boot.  After getting the disk ejected and the computer restarted, the disk would never mount again.  I've defered upgrade for a year but at this point need to upgrade my MBP at least to Snow Leopard and possibly Lion.
    The problem doesn't seem to be with the DVD, since it continues to mount fine in other computers, and in fact a borrowed Snow Leopard DVD also will not mount on the MBP.
    BUT ... the problem also does not seem to be with the optical drive in my computer, as it can read & mount the install/restore disks that came with the computer as well as other CDs and DVD ROMs.  Only the Snow Leopard install DVDs fail to mount.
    I've also tried mounting the 10.6 install DVD on my Mac Pro desktop, making it available over the network (ethernet) with DVD/CD sharing.  I can mount the remote disk from my MBP that way, but when I launch the installer, the application launches (its own menus are displayed, I can quit from menu, for example) but does nothing -- no windows open, nothing.
    I've also tried "Remote Install" (again with the DVD made available with the Remote Install MacOS X application on my desktop), but when I boot the MBP with option held down, the remote disk is not available as a startup disk.
    Zapping the PRAM did not help.
    Am off to the store to get an optical drive cleaning kit and a blank DVD big enough to burn a new disk image, but would appreciate any further ideas at this point....

    Solution that worked: Copy the Install DVD to a USB flash drive and boot from that. 
    http://www.maciverse.com/install-os-x-snow-leopard-from-usb-flash-drive.html
    Up and running with Snow Leopard now and working on the updates.

  • Is it possible to install leopard from external USB DVD drive?

    Hi all,
    I've read through the various posts on the subject and there doesn�t seem to be a definitive answer on this. I've got a Lacie USB2 DL DVD drive which I'm trying to use to install leopard on an earlier MacBook Pro (core duo 2.0ghz). I've tried the various suggestions (hold c on boot, hold option key on boot, set dvd as startup drive), and so far been unsuccessful. The drive is just not recognized.
    The DVD media is fine(I've got family edition of Leopard), I've successfully installed it on my G5. The Lacie drive recognizes it fine, when I'm in tiger on MBP and insert the disk it is mounted as I would expect. I did try dbl-clicking the install icon as well (in case you were wondering)
    So, does anyone have any other ideas for me to try, or should I go and get a refund on the Lacie drive? The guys in the store (Apple authorized reseller, not Apple Store) assured me it would work, so I don't want to look like a clown if it is possible and I'm just doing it wrong
    Anyway, thanks in advance for any replies.

    Hi,
    Thanks for the reply. Yes the MBP is currently running Tiger, I want to flatten this with a fresh install of Leopard. I can view the install DVD when in Tiger currently.
    I haven't tried what you have suggested, but I have seen various posts suggesting this approach. I've also seen several posts explain how to create a partition on an external firewire Harddrive and this seems to have worked for various people.
    This would however mean that I didn't really need the external Lacie drive at all, as I've got access to my G5s DVD drive over the network. The more I search on this, the more convinced I am the USB drive was a bad idea.
    Once again thank for the response.

  • Upgrade from Tiger 10.4.11 directly to Snow leopard 10.6.3 (dvd)

    After reading your advices I 've tried to upgrade my MacBook 2Ghz Intel Core 2 duo directly to Snow leopard 10.6.3 from the DVD. But it did not work ! The install program said it is not possible. Could you tell why and what I have to do ? By the way I can't find no more Snow Leopard in the Apple store ! I need this updated in order to active a new device and need to have the last version of I Tunes. So... Thanks for your help

    Hello, BD Aqua many thanks for your prompt reply. It's a gray one. And the message is  "OSX can't 'be installed on this computer " or something like that. The installing program doesn't launch anything but just ask me the language I choice and after ...relaunching and relaunching ... nothing happens. However when I' ve called previously the Apple support they told me to upgrade directly in Snow Leopard. I want to be sure to have the possibility to install it before purchasing it and in which version ?
    And do I have to erase my previous disk as somebody recommand it before installing the new OS ?

  • My PowerMac G5 will not read my Leopard disc, dual layer dvd, how do I force boot from UBS DVD drive to install?? Or is there another way. It just keeps spitting out the disc!!

    I have a power mac G5. Ir originally had Tiger on it. When I reinstalled for some odd reason the disc decided to install Panther, no clue why!! Either way I got a hold of a Leopard disc for this computer. It is apple certified and bought from Amazon and works for this computer.
    Hoever, for some odd reason it keeps spitting it out. Discs under 4.7 GB is reads fine but the bigger discs it wont seem to read. What I need is to know how to get, or force, it to boot from an extrenal dvd drive. Or any other methods to get it to install.

    I do not believe you can "Upgrade" directly from the "Panther" installed on your computer to "Leopard".  You have to have at least "Tiger" installed already Before you can install Leopard.  Thus your Mac is not recognizing the Leopard Install disk.

  • Leopard problem loading a DVD on the machine it was burnt on ??

    I burnt a DVD+R today at the "max possible" speed. After it finished I tried to watch it on the Mini - it claimed the disc was damaged. So I thought "Drat, coaster" and made another. That one, having been ejected after the burn, was refused loading by the drive. Rather than burning a third, I tried both with the DVD player connected to my TV - both played fine.
    Now, I see on some forum that "this is a known Leopard problem". Anyone know anything about that?

    Burning at the max possible speed is a sure path to poor finished disk. It's recommended that you burn at the slowest speed possible to produce the best disk possible. Also those in the know here recommend Verbatim DVD-R disks as the best you can use. It has the highest concentration of dyes in the various layers. What brand disk are you using.
    Also I suggest you save the project to a disk image before burning. That way you can preview the project by mounting the disk image and playing it with DVD Player. If it plays OK on the computer then you can narrow the problem to the media.
    OT

  • Unable to load Mac OS x Leopard CPU drop in DVD

    The Leopard DVD Will not load when holding down"C" on starting up.
    Installer unable to open the package.
    Message says this is likely due to install framework's runner executible not having the proper ownership and/or permissions.
    Thus I can't reload OS 10.5

    Which version iMac do you have, and which Leopard DVD are you trying to boot from?
    Is it one you originally used to install Leopard on your iMac or did your iMac come with Leopard?
    If the latter, you have to install from the Software Restore disc that originally shipped with your Mac.
    If the former, it could be the DVD has become damaged somehow (scratched, dirt on the disc, etc.)

  • Snow Leopard Only Available on DVD?

    Hi! I've finally convinced my daughter/son-in-law they need to move up to Snow Leopard from Tiger. Can they buy a downloadable version or do they have to buy it on a DVD? We are not interested in any of those sites that are trying to rip Apple off. Just a legit Apple download. I've googled and can't seem to locate a downloadable version.
    Thank you in advance for your help.
    Judie

    There is no downloadable version of Snow Leopard. It must be purchased on DVD. If the problem is that the machine in question does not have a DVD drive, then I'd have to question whether it meets the [Snow Leopard system requirements|http://www.apple.com/macosx/specs.html].

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