New Mac!  Migrating issue from Tiger to Snow Leopard

I recently bought a new MacBook Pro 15" before I relocated overseas (because I couldn't live without a Mac while I waited for my iMac to be shipped abroad).
During the initial set-up, I used the migration assistant to transfer everything from my iMac (running 10.4) to the MacBook Pro (running 10.6). As expected, the transfer worked perfectly!
Actually, it worked a bit too perfectly because the MacBook Pro now seems to think it is called 'Geoffrey Sharpe's iMac G5'. To make matters worse, I am not yet able to connect to the internet from my apartment so I am writing this from the PC at work.
Is there an account setting somewhere that I will need to change?

Geoff, how did you go about the migration? Did you simply connect the two Macs, open the MBP and follow the initial prompts to 'Migrate From Another Mac'?
Or did you use the Snow Leopard DVD and perform a "Restore System from Backup..."? If so, not necessarily a good idea when you are moving from one Mac to another. See the following:
Mac OS X v10.6: Issues after restoring a Mac from a Time Machine backup made with a different Mac
http://support.apple.com/kb/TS3243
Your initial Restore/Migration approach will determine which direction resolving this issue will take. So let us know by answering the questions above. The fact that it thinks it is your iMac points to the possibility that you performed a "Restore System from Backup..." and not a simply migration of your user data and apps.

Similar Messages

  • Problems using Migration Assistant from Tiger to Snow Leopard

    I want to scavenge files and apps from a Power Mac G4 (PowerMac3,5) running Tiger 10.4.11 before I turn it out to pasture. Most of them were migrated years ago to another system and have been updated and upgraded over the years, but a few apps have no modern equivalent. Now I want to do one last "pull" to pick up anything left behind all those years ago, particularly apps for which the install discs are in deep storage at best and possibly discarded.
    I'm trying to use Migration Assistant in a nearly virgin Snow Leopard 10.6.8 system (installed fresh from 10.6.3 retail optical disc, updated over the network, lightly tested). It has a single admin account, no other user accounts.
    Possible complicating factors: the Snow Leopard system is Server running under Parallels 10.1.4 on Yosemite 10.10.2 on an Early 2008 Mac Pro (MacPro3,1) with  third-party USB3 controller in a PCI slot.
    At present, I'm using a portable drive with both FW and USB interfaces as an intermediate storage (FW on the G4 to clone the system drive, USB on the Mac Pro to connect it to the virtual machine). SL sees the drive just fine, can copy files from it, and can even run apps from it. Migration Assistant sees the drive and offers to migrate from it.
    Two problems:
    1. No matter what user(s) I select for migration, Migration Assistant tells me it is a duplicate account. Proposing an account name never used before does not help. As a result, no user files can be migrated. (Obviously, I could copy them in other ways, but I think MA should do a more thorough job.)
    2. Migration Assistant offers to migrate absolutely no applications. Even applications that SL will run from the drive cannot be migrated. (Some are PPC apps, but SL will run them via Rosetta. Others are Universal apps.)
    Am I expecting too much of Migration Assistant?
    Is the Migration Assistant shipped with SL Server (and updated through Software Update) not capable of running under SL Server?
    Should SL MA refuse to migrate any applications from a Power Mac, even Universal applications?
    Am I missing something obvious?
    Is there key information I have omitted?

    markwmsn wrote:
    ...It's not the twenty bucks, it's the principle of the thing.
    Not sure what you meant by that statement.  Although this "principle" may be more important to you than the twenty bucks, I know that my time is worth more to me than your twenty bucks!
    What apps are you using?
    markwmsn wrote:
    I was able to install Snow Leopard (client) in a partition, and it was able to migrate users and many applications from the G4 clone on the portable drive. Some of the apps even run.
    Then I went back to my SL Server virtual machine and tried to migrate FROM the SL client partition. Migration Assistant showed the same symptoms as importing from the clone directly (no apps offered, bogus "dup user" errors). I am forced to conclude that either (a) Migration Assistant 3.0.4/1.1 is broken when run on SL Server or (b) my new SL Server installation is broken. I'm either going to have to boot back and forth to run the old apps or find their installation media and reinstall them in my SL Server virtual machine.
    Even worse, I realized that one of the antique programs I still haven't dug everything out of is a Classic application that had to be kludged to survive Y2K!
    Thanks again, MIchaelLAX.
    Anybody else have any clever ideas?
    So, glad to see that Migration Assistant did work for you in Snow Leopard...
    More clever ideas:
    Install Snow Leopard client in Parallels and use its Migration Assistant:
    http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=1365439
    Here is a recent post I assembled for running Classic apps on Intel Macs:
    With the newer Intel Macs, you have to run a Classic emulator such as SheepShaver, which requires you to extract the Mac ROMs from your older Classic Mac and then install Mac OS 9.
    A related program is Chubby Bunny, which comes bundled with all of that included (google the term "Classic-On-Intel v 4.0.1 chubby bunny").
    More information on SheepShaver:
    http://www.emaculation.com/doku.php/sheepshaver_mac_os_x_setup
    and
    http://www.everymac.com/mac-answers/mac-os-9-classic-support-faq/run-macos-9-on- intel-macs.html
    and more information about Chubby Bunny:
    http://www.macwindows.com/OS9_on_Intel_Mac.html#092408b
    and
    http://hackthemac.blogspot.co.uk/2008/08/chubby-bunny-old-virtual-machine.html
    Here is the Classic CD-ROM version of RISK II running in SheepShaver on my Lion Mac Mini:
                                  [click on image to enlarge]

  • I am upgrading from Tiger to Snow Leopard. I keep getting an error when I try to load the Mac Os x update combined. It says that it was corrupted during download. Have try loading from Apple website V10.6.7 upgrade combined but it still won't do it?

    I have an Intel Desktop iMac and I am upgrading from Tiger to Snow Leopard. I keep getting an error when it tries to load the Mac OS X update combined. It says that it was corrupted during download. Have try loading from Apple website  Mac OS X V10.6.7 upgrade combined but it still won't do it? Any other suggestions. The printer is not working either - I am not sure if they are connected. Everything else is fine.

    Please excuse, but I have to ask an obvious question: Did you already update using the Snow Leopard Retail install DVD? (You must do this first; 10.6.7 is just an update if you already have 10.6.) Are you, then, trying to update from whatever version was on the install DVD to 10.6.7?
    Otherwise, I'd keep trying. The 10.6.7 Combo is a huge update.

  • I am trying to upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard.  When I insert the disk and install starts, it states "This disk is used for Time Machine backups" and Mac OSX can't be installed.  Does anyone know how to correct this (since Tiger doesn't have Time Mach

    I am trying to upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard.  When I insert the disk and install starts, it states "This disk is used for Time Machine backups" and Mac OSX can't be installed.  Does anyone know how to correct this (since Tiger doesn't have Time Machine)?

    http://support.apple.com/kb/TS2986

  • Migration from tiger to snow leopard problem on iMac

    I got
         Import Error
         The doc is encrypted and can't be opened
    error when opening a previous password protected spreadsheet with .xls file extenstion after migrating from tiger to snow leopard (10.6.3) on my iMac. Any help is appreciated. Maybe there is other thread talking about this already?

    This is an error message from Numbers trying to open password protect Excel files, which it cannot do. Assuming you have Excel, use Excel to open it.

  • Updating from Tiger to Snow Leopard without buying the Mac Box Set

    Is it possible to update from Tiger to Snow Leopard without buying the Mac Box Set? My sister already has iLife 09 so I could borrow it and simply buy Snow Leopard. Is that possible or would it still violate the licensing agreement?

    R C-R:
    Barry Hemphill wrote:
    You will note that Apple says that the upgrade is for OS X 10.5 users.
    Note that this does not say Snow Leopard is not an upgrade for 10.4 users.
    Did you read item C from the license link you posted (underline was added for emphasis)?
    Leopard Upgrade Licenses. If you have purchased an Upgrade for Mac OS X Leopard license, then subject to the terms and conditions of this License, you are granted a limited non-exclusive license to install, use and run one (1) copy of the Apple Software on a single Apple-branded computer _as long as that computer has a properly licensed copy of Mac OS X Leopard already installed on it._ If you have purchased a Family Pack Upgrade for Mac OS X Leopard license, then subject to the terms and conditions of this License, you are granted a limited non-exclusive license to install, use and run one (1) copy of the Apple Software on up to a maximum of five (5) Apple-branded computers at a time as long as those computers are located in the same household (as defined above), are used by persons who occupy that same household, and each such computer has a properly licensed copy of Mac OS X Leopard already installed on it. The Family Pack Upgrade for Mac OS X Leopard License does not extend to business or commercial users.
    The OP asked about using the upgrade (and, obviously, try to avoid buying the box set) to move from OS X 10.4 to OS X 10.6. I mentioned the license agreement to allow the OP to make their own decision.
    Barry

  • Upgraded from TIGER to SNOW LEOPARD

    Hello,
    How can I uprade from TIGER to SNOW LEOPARD? Do I simply use the upgrade snow leopard to do so? Will that create any instability or issues?
    thank you very much.
    Alex

    Yes, you can upgrade from Tiger to Snow by purchasing the SL DVD. Doing so would only create stability problems if you already have problems, so you should be sure you have a clean system before upgrading. See the following:
    System Upgrade and Installation Procedure
    Basic Caveats
    1. Disconnect all peripherals except the original mouse and keyboard.
    2. Quit all applications if this is not an installation from an Installer DVD.
    3. The installation process should not be interrupted. If a power outage or other interruption occurs during installation you may have to erase the hard drive and reinstall from scratch.
    4. Once the installation begins do not use the computer in any way except to reply to dialog prompts or to restart when the installation is completed. This is especially critical during the installation stage known as "Optimizing the System."
    System Update Procedure
    A. Repair hard drive and permissions.
    Repairing the Hard Drive and Permissions
    Boot from your OS X Installer disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Installer menu (Utilities menu for Tiger or Leopard.) After DU loads select your OS X volume from the list on the left, click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer. Now restart normally.
    If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior (4.1 for Leopard) and/or TechTool Pro (4.6.2 for Leopard) to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X. Note that Disk Warrior will not work on Intel Macs.
    B. Clone your existing system to an external Firewire drive.
    How to Clone Using Restore Option of Disk Utility
    1. Open Disk Utility from the Utilities folder.
    2. Select the startup or source volume from the left side list.
    3. Click on the Restore tab in the DU main window.
    4. Drag the startup or source volume to the Source entry field.
    5. Select the backup or destination volume from the leftside list and drag it to the Destination entry field.
    6. Check the box to Erase Destination. Skip this step if you've already formatted the drive.
    7. Double-check you got it right, then click on the Restore button.
    C. Decide upon an installation option (This does not apply to Snow Leopard.)
    You have three upgrade options. If you use the Upgrade installation option be sure you have repaired the hard drive and permissions first and made your backup. If you choose the Archive and Install option then you only need to repair the hard drive.
    Neither of the above options will erase the disk. Some of your software may not work with a new system. You will need to upgrade those programs. It would be best to do the upgrades to your software before upgrading to the new system version.
    Personally, I would erase the hard drive and do a fresh install of Snow Leopard then use Migration Assistant to migrate your old Home folder from the backup. This may take some extra time but is less likely to have problems that may be the result of an upgrade installation.

  • I want to upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard...I'm apprehensive about Lion.

    I've been hearing so many "glitch" anecdotes about Lion. Until these problems are resolved
    I want to upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard but I'll be buying a new Apple computer to
    do that..
    I presently have a a 10.4 iMAC with only 2.33 GB of memory and I'm getting a new puter
    in order to have 4 GB. Is it recommended to use Lion with a new Apple computer or can I use
    Snow Leopard without missing out on anything? Are the stories about Lion just the usual thing
    that always happens with a new upgrade? Tiger has worked perfectly for me for 6 years but that
    has been on computer that is 6 years old. (POWERPC) Does a new iMAC computer with intel
    require the latest operating system to work at top efficiency? Is my apprehension about Lion
    an over reaction to anecdotal info?

    Some of this is answered best by knowing what model computers are involved. If you are truly getting a brand new (as opposed to a newer used) computer then it will likely come with Lion installed, unless there's some old stock (which even then would have Lion installed but could still run under Snow Leopard which you would have to buy separately).  Macs will normally only run the version system that comes installed, or newer, so if you are getting a brand new Mac you won't have any choice but to run Lion (or its successors). It won't run Snow Leopard unless it is a new used computer.
    As for Lion stories, those would best be answered on the Lion forum. I still run Tiger which I why I'm on this forum.  There's always issues with any upgrade.  For me the biggest drawback to Lion is all my software is PPC generation and Lion stopped supporting PPC completely. If I got a brand new computer I would also have to upgrade all my software which could easily run to over a thousand dollars more.

  • Safe To Upgrade From Tiger To Snow Leopard?

    Is it safe to upgrade a Mac from Tiger straight to Snow Leopard, therefore bypassing Leopard?
    If you're running Tiger on your Mac, can you insert the Snow Leopard Install DVD and run it as normal, and the upgrade will go fine?

    Hi Reuben
    I think other folk have covered the potential 'gotcha' of data loss by suggesting you do a back up first. I went from Tiger to Snow Leopard directly by way of the family boxed set on both a MacBook and an older Mac Mini. Of course there is no "Time Machine" app on Tiger so back up consisted of copying all personal data to an external drive and copying it back after completing the OS upgrade by installing from the DVD. I didn't attempt to update AND keep any data, the thought of a nice, clean, new installation was irresistable.
    The only issue I've had since the upgrade has been a minor niggle, which is that while I can use the 'sudo' command when logged in as the main administrator, additional users, even if they are assigned "administrator privileges", cannot use 'sudo'. Maybe I should look for answers to this elsewhere. It may not even be related to the Tiger -> Snow Leopard upgrade.
    Go for it :-)

  • Upgraded from Tiger to Snow Leopard - now have problems with basic apps?

    I have a 2007 iMac (5.1, 2007) dual core. It's capable of running Snow Leopard and Lion (but not, I believe ML).
    I just bought the upgrade SL discs from Apple and installed them as an upgrade, moving up to 10.6.3 (from the discs). After running software update I'm now on 10.6.8.
    Since upgrading I've successfully run Time Machine. However I have the following problems:-
    A bunch of emails were present in the Inbox, but contained no body text - just the subject line. I have managed to since find most of them successfully from TM. This is a minor annoyance but I thought I'd mention it.
    ITunes won't boot up. It booted the first time I tried it, but since then the little icon just bounces up and down.
    Certain apps won't quit properly. I quit from the top menu, but the little blue light remains under the icon in the dock. I then have to 'Force Quit - Application Not Responding' *every time*.
    Safari frequently won't load up bookmarked or seach pages, the progress bar gets stuck part way across and I stare at the rainbow pinwheel for ages, before having to quit, then Force Quit, then restart Safari and try again.
    Now, I'm tempted to do a Clean Install, but after four international moves (Singapore-Australia-UK-Canada) I no longer have any of the original discs, and thus as I understand it will lose iLife. And iLife 11 needs Lion.
    I've done a disc permissions repair thing via the Mac Disc Utility. I've run a few clean-up operations via Onyx.
    Any suggestions gratefully received. My Mac as been running great for years, but this upgrade has been extremely disappointing thus far.
    thanks
    Feargus

    Hi baltwo
    Many thanks for your advice. I've read all the links and will be buying a 2nd external HD to do a SuperDuper back up. I already had a 1Tb drive with Maxtor back up on it, and I also managed to get a Time Machine back up as well, so at least my data should be safe.
    Qn - If I back up the System and Utility folders as well as the Home folder, I don't suppose I can restore them after an install and everything (eg iLife) will 'just work'?
    Anyway, I went straight from Tiger to Snow Leopard. I don't have any Tiger discs either (see reasons above) so now have no way of restoring original set up. I tried to boot from the SL install CD and then hold 'C' but must be getting something wrong as I don't get the Disk Utility pop up. It just boots as normal to the desktop.
    Anyway, via the normal Disc Utitlity I've done a Repair Permissions again with no major issues. However, my Onyx software now won't run at all so I can't clean any caches a second time.
    I've contacted the Apple rep who sold be the SL discs but she's not got back to me yet re iLife.
    This weekend I'm going to try a fresh upgrade. If that fails I'll try Erase and Install, if I can get the 'C' button timing right. I'll update if I have any successs.
    cheers
    f

  • I want to upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard on my 2008 MacPro. How do I avoid problems with the upgrade process?

    I want to upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard on my 2008 MacPro. How do I avoid problems with the upgrade process?

    #1 Do a complete bootable backup of your drive before upgrading. That way should anything happen you can revert back to the start and try again.
    Make sure you meet Snow Leopard 10.6 Technical Requirements - http://support.apple.com/kb/SP575
    You might also want to make sure you don't have software issues with SL:
    A Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard Application Compatibility List - http://snowleopard.wikidot.com/

  • Troubles with upgrade from tiger to snow leopard

    I just bought the full SL pack to upgrade from Tiger to Snow leopard but it is coming up with a different interface than my brand new macbookpro that came with sl installed. Is this normal or does it have to do with the fact that the old macbook pro is the first version of the intel macs?

    Joeymerizomac wrote:
    I mean that there are no folders or stacks below the demarcation line on the dock, so the applications folder and downloads, and documents are not there. I >have tried to drag the app and doc icons to that area but no go.
    I see. Your need to drag them to the right side of the demarcation line--the white squares in perspective. They don't work under the line.

  • Upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard with retail DVD.

    Apologies if this has been posted before, but I've not been able to find it when searching.
    I'm going to be upgrading an iMac from Tiger to Snow Leopard, using the retail DVD. When I boot from it, it only gives me the option to install, and there's no indication that it will be upgrading rather than installing a new copy.
    Can you upgrade Tiger to Snow Leopard with this DVD or would I have to do a clean install? If I can upgrade, is it normal that it isn't telling me it's going to do an upgrade?
    Thanks all.

    The Snow Leopard installer is somewhat optimized for updating an existing system: it uses data gathered from the old system to decide what to install, its network settings to attempt to access an Apple database of incompatible apps to supplement the list on the DVD, & other useful things.
    It even does the equivalent of Disk Utility's verify disk step before writing anything to the HD & does the actual upgrade as root user, making permissions issues a moot point.
    There is no reason to hesitate to use it in this way. It is greatly improved compared to earlier OS installers.

  • Want to upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard

    I spent over an hour through the apple store web site and cant find a way to upgrade directly from Mac OS 10.4 Tiger to the latest Snow Leopard version.
    The Apple web site gives only one purchase possibility : to upgrade from Leopard 10.5 to Snow Leopard 10.6. But how to upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard ?

    Francois Dormoy wrote:
    I spent over an hour through the apple store web site and cant find a way to upgrade directly from Mac OS 10.4 Tiger to the latest Snow Leopard version.
    The Apple web site gives only one purchase possibility : to upgrade from Leopard 10.5 to Snow Leopard 10.6. But how to upgrade from Tiger to Snow Leopard ?
    this has been oft asked and answered. you can buy a Macbox set which will give you snow leopard, ilife and and iwork. or you can buy a $29 standalong snow leoaprd dvd although there is a big disagreement on the board whether using it to go from tiger to snow leopard directly violates ULA (I think it does). but the actual disk is the same as in the macbox set and either one will upgrade you to SL.

  • Applications on MacBook run slow since upgraded from Tiger to Snow Leopard

    I have upgraded my MacBook from Tiger to Snow Leopard. After the upgrade, my Mac runs very slowly and it takes several minutes to load a program. I cannot use my graphic softwares and firefox properly, because it takes several minutes to actually start up the application and also to use the application.
    My MacBook states that 45 GB from a total of 110 GB are available space. Do I need to upgrade my HardDrive disk space, or do I need to upgrade my Ram?? What can I do so that my applications/software on my MacBook runs quicker (as they have been prior the Snow Leopard upgrade)?
    Please advise! Details of my MacBook below.
    Processor Name: Intel Core 2 Duo
    Processor Speed: 2.16 GHz
    Number Of Processors: 1
    Total Number Of Cores: 2
    L2 Cache: 4 MB
    Memory: 2 GB
    Bus Speed: 667 MHz

    Hi...If it were my MacBook I would repair permissions via Disk Utility...(in your Applications > Utilities) folder......as well as 'Verify Disk' while you are in the Disk Utility....both functions are under the 'First Aid' tab...single click 'MacIntosh HD' to select it (left column) and then run First Aid.....see what that shows and does first
    Expect some odd error messages while repairing permissions....ignore them...

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