OS X 10.5.6 Leopard DVD set

  I have a 17" MacBook Pro model MA611LL/A. Can I use the OS X 10.5.6 Leopard DVD's from a 15" MacBook Pro. To re-install OS X 10.5.6 Leopard back into the MacBook Pro 17" lap top? Do not know which model computer the OS X 10.5.6 Leopard for 15" came from. It was listed on eBay for sale. Reason I want to buy it? I know have Snow Leopard, and it disabled my Firewire ports. Firewire ports work finw, when I use 10.4.8 Tiger as the startup drive. Am hoping Leopard, will not have the same disabling effect on the Firewire ports, that Snow Leopard has caused.

No, the disk set is machine specific.

Similar Messages

  • I am in the process of updating the os of my macbook pro and have installed from the snow leopard dvd and did the 10.6.8 combo v1.1 as well and wis to update further but i now cannot get preview so i am concerned about going forward. how to get prev

    I am updating the OS on my MacBook Pro from 10.5.8.  I have installed 10.6.8 and the 10.6.8 combo v1.1.  I cannot open my older version of Preview and do not appear to have a newer version which i thought would be on the Snow Leopard dvd.  How can I get the correct version of Preview and is it advisable to upgrade to OS7 andOS8?

    It is always installed with whatever new version of OS X is installed or appropriate updates. Since you plan to go forward your choice depends on your model. I would urge you to perform a clean install instead of continuing the upgrade path which may interject incompatibilities.
    Upgrading to Yosemite
    You can upgrade to Yosemite from Lion or directly from Snow Leopard. Yosemite can be downloaded from the Mac App Store for FREE.
    Upgrading to Yosemite
    To upgrade to Yosemite you must have Snow Leopard 10.6.8 or Lion installed. Download Yosemite from the App Store. Sign in using your Apple ID. Yosemite is free. The file is quite large, over 5 GBs, so allow some time to download. It would be preferable to use Ethernet because it is nearly four times faster than wireless.
        OS X Mavericks/Yosemite - System Requirements
          Macs that can be upgraded to OS X Yosemite
             1. iMac (Mid 2007 or newer) - Model Identifier 7,1 or later
             2. MacBook (Late 2008 Aluminum, or Early 2009 or newer) - Model Identifier 5,1 or later
             3. MacBook Pro (Mid/Late 2007 or newer) - Model Identifier 3,1 or later
             4. MacBook Air (Late 2008 or newer) - Model Identifier 2,1 or later
             5. Mac mini (Early 2009 or newer) - Model Identifier 3,1 or later
             6. Mac Pro (Early 2008 or newer) - Model Identifier 3,1 or later
             7. Xserve (Early 2009) - Model Identifier 3,1 or later
    To find the model identifier open System Profiler in the Utilities folder. It's displayed in the panel on the right.
         Are my applications compatible?
             See App Compatibility Table - RoaringApps.
    Upgrading to Lion
    If your computer does not meet the requirements to install Yosemite, it may still meet the requirements to install Lion.
    You can purchase Lion at the Online Apple Store. The cost is $19.99 (as it was before) plus tax.  It's a download. You will get an email containing a redemption code that you then use at the Mac App Store to download Lion. Save a copy of that installer to your Downloads folder because the installer deletes itself at the end of the installation.
         Lion System Requirements
           1. Mac computer with an Intel Core 2 Duo, Core i3, Core i5, Core i7,
               or Xeon processor
           2. 2GB of memory
           3. OS X v10.6.6 or later (v10.6.8 recommended)
           4. 7GB of available space
           5. Some features require an Apple ID; terms apply.
    Before attempting a clean install you want to first download the appropriate installer application from the App Store. It will download into your Applications folder. You need to make a copy of it in your Downloads folder so you can make a bootable USB flash drive:
    Make Your Own Mavericks, Mountain/Lion Installer
    After downloading the installer you must first save the Install Mac OS X application. After the installer downloads DO NOT click on the Install button. Go to your Applications folder and make a copy of the installer. Move the copy into your Downloads folder. Now you can click on the Install button. You must do this because the installer deletes itself automatically when it finishes installing.
       2. Get a USB flash drive that is at least 8 GBs. Prep this flash drive as follows:
    Open Disk Utility in your Utilities folder.
    After DU loads select your flash drive (this is the entry with the mfgr.'s ID and size) from the leftside list. Under the Volume Scheme heading set the number of partitions from the drop down menu to one. Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, set the partition scheme to GUID then click on the OK button. Click on the Partition button and wait until the process has completed.
    Select the volume you just created (this is the sub-entry under the drive entry) from the left side list.
    Click on the Erase tab in the DU main window.
    Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled.) Click on the Options button, check the button for Zero Data and click on OK to return to the Erase window.
    Click on the Erase button. The format process can take up to an hour depending upon the flash drive size.
    Use DiskMaker X to put your installer clone onto the USB flash drive.
    Make your own Yosemite flash drive installer using the Yosemite tool:
    You can also create a Yosemite flash drive installer via the Terminal. Yosemite has its own built-in installer maker you use via the Terminal:
    How to Make an OS X Yosemite Boot Installer USB Drive

  • I need appleisightinstaller.exe to install the isight driver for Windows Vista running in Parallel Desktop 6 for Mac, but I don't have a Leopard DVD. What came with my Macbook Air was a flash stick "MacBook Air Software Reinstall Drive" only.

    I need appleisightinstaller.exe to install the isight driver for Windows Vista running in Parallel Desktop 6 for Mac, but I don't have a Leopard DVD. What came with my Macbook Air was a flash stick "MacBook Air Software Reinstall Drive" only.

    All,
    A very interesting NOTE to this thread. In order to try and get the "ignore permissions" box to show up in GET INFO (so I could execute Matt the Magician's solution to file sharing issues)-- I ran the terminal command for disabling ACLs on my internal HD / start up disk (as indicated in the linked thread to BDAqua's forum).
    Although I understand that this was useless for disabling permissions on the start up disk (as everyone here pointed out) and allowing me to see the "ignore permissions" check box - somehow it did seem to fix my file sharing problem...and that was the root problem I wanted solved in the first place! After doing the terminal command and a quick reboot, I went in and tested file sharing on the chosen directory and I can create new files or work from existing files in the directory, with both users being able to modify / and save from both machines and each machine sees the revisions and can build from them. Bottom line - I'm stoked and want to thank everyone for their help.
    The only other tweak I made was going over to my wife's machine and instead of using her log in / password, I just used my name and password to connect to my main machine that was sharing directories. Maybe that's what fixed the problem or the ACL disable but either way...I'm up and running the way I want to be.
    Hope this thread helps anyone else who has these file sharing / permissions issues with Leopard. Especially for anyone wanting to do such a simple file sharing set up between 2 computers. I wish I understood exactly which tweak fixed the problem, but at least it works the way I want now.
    So happy to be done w/this one!
    Thx everyone. Any additional input on what solved it is welcome, so my curiosity is quelled...
    TC

  • Leopard DVD won't boot after bad install

    I ran the leopard installation yesterday and I realized that i needed to do some more work on the drive before i installed, so i clicke cancel and restarted the computer. Now the dvd won't boot. I installed tiger again(came with laptop) and tried doing various other things with the disk. Almost any ntensive use of the disk (booting from it, trying to clone it, etc.) will result in the superdrive powering up and then down repeatedly, sans result. I left the leopard dvd to boot for hours and when it tries it gets to the grey logo and the drive does that power up/down cycle endlessly. I can boot from ubuntu's disk and the tiger disk that came with my computer. The disk mounts to the desktop, btw, and i can browse the files and everything. Apple support was no help.

    I've been doing some work with the disk. I did another attempt at creating a dmg from it and got the same result, so I googled the error which led me to a thread on this site with a similar issue. The error was input/output error. They found that it was due to a corrupt file... so I did a cp -r of the disk and it said that a few files did not exist:
    cp -r "Mac OS X Install DVD" /Users/mattebooks/Desktop/Leopard
    cp: Mac OS X Install DVD/usr/lib/libpython.dylib: No such file or directory
    cp: Mac OS X Install DVD/usr/lib/libpython2.5.dylib: No such file or directory
    cp: Mac OS X Install DVD/usr/lib/libpython2.dylib: No such file or directory
    cp: Mac OS X Install DVD/usr/lib/libruby.1.dylib: No such file or directory
    cp: Mac OS X Install DVD/usr/lib/libruby.dylib: No such file or directory
    cp: Mac OS X Install DVD/usr/lib/libtcl.dylib: No such file or directory
    cp: Mac OS X Install DVD/usr/lib/libtcl8.4.dylib: No such file or directory
    cp: Mac OS X Install DVD/usr/lib/libtk.dylib: No such file or directory
    cp: Mac OS X Install DVD/usr/lib/libtk8.4.dylib: No such file or directory
    So I set Finder to show hidden files and went to these files libpython and libpython2.5 are aliases of libpython2 and libpython2 is an alias of a file in a non-existing folder. A little more digging and I find out that the python, ruby, tcl and tk framework folders are all missing, all from the same folder... interesting. Maybe I could add the files in and reburn the disk. My guess is that the loader looks for these files repeatedly. The path to the files is /System/Library/Frameworks/... If anyone could email these to me I could try and rebuild the disk...

  • Not the right Leopard DVD - can I still get the drivers installed?

    My cousin just got a Macbook Pro 15 and I am helping her get Boot Camp/Windows up and running. She came from out of town and did not get her Leopard DVD and I realized the hard way that the DVD that I have (from my mac mini purchase 6 months ago) does not install the drivers for most of the peripherals.
    Is there a way out for me or do I have to remotely help her after she gets back to her home?

    Lyssa wrote:
    If she just purchased this computer brand-new from Apple, then yes, you'll have to help her remotely, if she needs anything. The only place her drivers can be found is on the disc that came with her computer.
    You can get Windows installed for her and make sure she knows how to boot between the two OS's, of course. And installing the drivers is very easy--all she has to do is be booted in Windows and pop in that DVD.
    ~Lyssa
    Thanks for the response. Yes, she purchased it 3 days back. I have installed Windows already and I actually wanted to set her up with Parallels as well and I did not want to do it till I have Windows XP patched up and for that I need Boot Camp to be updated to the latest version first
    Oh well, this is going to be a good test of my remote help skills

  • Replacement Leopard DVD

    Hi,
    I recently ran disk utility to make sure my HD was still ok, and it said I need to repair the disk. Unfortunately, I haven't got my DVD anymore (lost it when I moved out of my university halls).
    Is there a way to get a replacement leopard dvd or something that I can use to repair the disk? The 12 month warranty expired in December, and I stupidly didn't take up the extended apple care.
    I don't mind having to pay a shipping charge, but I'd rather not have to go out and buy the retail dvd.
    Thanks

    Restart the computer with the Shift key held down; this quietly runs a disk repair utility.
    Here's more on Neil's instructions:
    [Mac OS X: Starting up in Safe Mode|http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=107393]
    [What is Safe Boot, Safe Mode? (Mac OS X)|http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=107392]
    [Safe Boot takes longer than normal startup|http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=107394]
    Note that any repairs are not as effective as when booted from your installer disc.
    There's also [fsk in Single User Mode|http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106214] and [Post by japamac about using fsk|http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=1649143&tstart=0] I believe using this from SUM is more effective than Safe Mode, but again not as good as when run from your installer disc.
    Call Apple Customer Support (http://www.apple.com/contact/phone_contacts.html ). Provide the serial number and specifications of the Mac. They may be able to provide a replacement set of discs for a fee. These discs will be for whatever OS was installed on the computer originally, so if you have an upgraded version you will need to obtain the discs some other way.

  • Software Reinstall Drive vs. Snow Leopard DVD

    I am attempting to solve a problem with X11 crashing (posted in another thread). Information online advises reinstalling X11 from the Optional Installs folder of the Snow Leopard install DVD that I assume comes with most Macs. However, the MacBook air only comes with a Software Reinstall Drive (thumb drive) which does not contain an Optional Installs folder. It only contains Snow Leopard and iLife reinstallers.
    The developer tools normally contained in an Xcode package file are not on the thumb drive either.
    I have used Pacifist to snoop into the Snow Leopard pckg file, and it does not contain separate packages for optional installs (Rosetta, printer drivers, X11, languages, etc.). I am also set to view invisible files, but no joy there.
    Question: Does the Software Reinstall Drive not contain the same software installation options that the Snow Leopard DVD does?
    My question is not about installing X11, but rather, why does the MacBook Air's software reinstall thumb drive not come with the same software that other Macs (that are provided with the full DVD) do? Am I wrong that other Macs come with the full DVD?
    Message was edited by: Mr. Mellow

    Mr. Mellow wrote:
    Niel, I have given the old college try to finding these downloads on Apple's website, but with no success. If you or someone could help me with this, I would appreciate it.
    Hawe you looked at this?
    http://www.macupdate.com/app/mac/26593/xquartz

  • Snow leopard dvd doesn't work

    I bought snow leopard DVD but it seems corrupted. I put inside the Mac and it spit it out immediately. (I tried both sides ... :-) ... many times).
    Other CDs and DVDs works fine.
    My question is: since I have an original version and a serial number printed somewhere (I hope) on the Disk or on the package, is there a place where download the Mac OS Snow Leopard from?
    I have Mac OS X 10.5.8
    3.06 Ghz Intel Core Duo processor
    2 GB 800 Mhz DDR2 SDRAM

    No, you can't download Snow Leopard.  You'll need to contact Apple and they will replace the disk.

  • Is it possible to upgrade a G4 Xserve with an ISO image of a Leopard DVD?

    I have a G4 Xserve (tray load) with only a CD drive.  Leopard is on DVD only. I created an ISO image of the Leopard DVD but it will not work. Not sure why. I copied it to the Hard Drive of the Xserve and also tried it from an external drive (not booted from that drive however). 
    Any suggestions?  Was trying to avoid booting into target disk mode.  I only have an Intel laptop and not sure this would work anyway either.
    All assistance is appreciated.
    Lisa

    Did not work for me. Tried copying it directly to Xserve desktop, to a partitioned drive, to an external firewire drive.  Nothing.
    Sharing out the laptop DVD drive and booting to target mode did work, however. Very very VERY slow, like over 3 hours slow, but it worked.
    All up and running now.
    thanks again,
    Lisa

  • 10.5.2 Update Failed - Computer No Longer Boots from HDD NOR Leopard DVD

    Hi. I hope someone can help me. I have one of the new 24" iMacs that has been working perfectly in 10.5.1. I started downloading the 10.5.2 update last night. About 130MB in, it said it had lost internet connection and stopped. I ran Software Update again and it resumed where it had left off, then said it had to be restarted to install, and went on its way. Then I got a pop up that said it could not be installed, or the install failed.
    Now when I boot, it spends a long time on the grey screen with the apple logo and spinning disc. Eventually it turns to the blank blue screen and just sits there. Then I tried booting from the Leopard DVD (i figured i would just restore from my latest Time Machine backup and try the whole process again), except when it gets to the part of verifying that Mac OSX is on my computer it pops up with a system log and says I can't do anything. I can restart, shutdown, or save log.
    What can I do?

    When you tried again in the morning did you have anything connected to the computer apart from your keyboard/mouse? If yes, then try again leaving the computer to "cool down" - you could even remove the power cord. When you come to try again, only the power cord and keyboard/mouse should be connected - and to go the shortest route, press the C key immediately after hitting the power button. Keep the key down until something happens ...if you get a black cursor, you're in business and can relax for as long as it takes to boot from the DVD. Try not to give up - I believe that constant powering down and troubled restarts stress the machine, perhaps causing it to overheat.
    If you do give up, try one more time to boot with the T key held down (again with nothing else connected) and if you boot into the Firewire logo screen, then connect a firewire cable to your other Mac and hopefully you will be able to get in.
    Simon

  • How Come the iMac Can't Boot Snow Leopard DVDs Anymore Under Lion and ML?

    Hi. I'm using ML as my main OS but I noticed when after installing Mountain Lion it doesn't recognize and just ejects the Snow Leopard DVD installers that came with my Mac (you could boot to it when the iMac had Snow Leopard). It doesn't see it as bootable anymore (it doesn't appear as bootable when you boot then press option nor does Startup in System Preferences see it as bootable. The DVD's are in good condition coz' it's not used that often):
    Windows 7 Ultimate & Windows 8 Release Preview installer on a DVD-RW which is sees as blank (but it works find on a PC).
    Only Snow Leopard that's in a USB (not sure how they made that but it was made for me by Apple repair center). I did back the SL DVDs years ago as .cdr (Master). I'm not sure if the .cdr images of the original SL DVDs can be burned into dual layer DVDs and work like the original (how do you go about that? Do you just burn .cdr like you would with .iso or .dmg?)
    I think the hidden recovery partition starting with Lion is actually preventing DVDs from SL to lower versions from being recognized as bootable. Same with bootable Windows DVD-RW as Apple and the rest of the industry (I noticed netbooks now have recovery partitions too) switch to hidden partition and USB installers instead of medias like DVDs and CDs. I would guess if you could install Snow Leopard using an SL USB installer and complete erase the main hardisk along with the hidden recovery partition, install Snow Leopard it'll recognize Windows burned in DVD-RW again.
    I can't install Bootcamp coz' it sees Windows 7 & 8 installers as blank drives, even Windows USB installers are not bootable (both USB and DVD-RW installers work fine on the PC). I'm thinking of disabling the iMac's Superdrive by moving in a folder or renaming its driver/extension IOSDVDStorageFamily.kext maybe tomorrow so hopefully when BootCamp sees that the iMac doesn't have an optical drive it'll show the Create USB Installer option (now it only show 2 options) so that it'll create the installers into the Flash drive.
    I'm anxious of booting the USB Snow Leopard Installer and erasing the drive completely along with ML's recovery partition then installing SL in the hardisk because my Time Machine backup could get messed up. It might not restore the ones backedup by Lion and ML, although I could manually copy paste the documents but that'll defeat the main purpose of having a Time Machine backup.
    Has anyone experienced this too with their Snow Leopard DVDs and Windows USB installers? Any solutions?
    Thank you in advance.
    God bless.

    Zap the PRAM and Reset the SMC, then try again.

  • Restoring Leopard DVD to a disc

    I'm not asking for advice but leaving some of my experiences installing Leopard to the small % of people who may benefit.
    I've completed around 50 Leopard installs on my Mac Pro. This is my hobby, to learn. Every install has gone fine, just the normal left over Leopard bugs which will be fixed in up coming releases. Just like Jaquar, Panther and Tiger was fixed.
    This was my usual plan: take the Leopard DVD then use the restore function in Leopard's Disk Utility to copy that DVD either to a partition on an external firewire hard drive or an internal hard drive on my Mac Pro. Reason for this was to speed up the installation time.
    The past few days I have been smitten with many unusual problems on my Mac Pro after installing Leopard from one of the partitions never the DVD. Its odd because many of the problems have been similar ones which I have read but could not reproduce in these discussion posts.
    I've spent many hours trying to figure out the cause of my install problem. I examined my normal scenario which was : 1) always use Leopard's Disk Utility to partition or erase any of my hard drives 2) boot into a previously INSTALLED Leopard system before doing the DVD restore to hard drive.
    I've gotten lazy and impatient the last few days so I by-passed my assumptions. I would boot up the Leopard DVD as normal and use Disk Utility as normal. Then because I had wiped out all my Leopard drives I had no installed Leopard system. So here comes the root cause: I did the restore to hard drive using Leopard Disk Utility as the Leopard DVD was booted up and active ie (ready to install the Leopard OS). I will not do this anymore.
    Here are some of the issues when I did the restore improperly:
    1) after system boot , Time Machine never comes up as normal
    2) trouble dragging my firewire icons to privacy in Spotlight, can't do it
    3) Login& Keychain would not give the update boot cache during restart
    4) 10.5.1 update would not either, only the Quicktime 7.3 install
    5) occasionally during boot cache update I'd wait an abnormally long time and the Mac Pro would not restart(stuck in an endless loop), had to do a hard restart
    6) short name was being used when it should not have
    I did not explore this further for other types of problems because I got sick of the ones I experienced.
    Now when I do a Leopard install, I check two things before installing any other software and wasting time: 1) open Mail and on the first window is the proper name shown or is it the short name and 2) once I install iWork '08 to check Pages. Open preference and under General preferences check if the Author is the proper name or the short name. If Mail and Pages fail then I would start over. I did a few full program installs and the ownership issue does not go away.
    I'm not saying Leopard is not worthy but only stressing that since Leopard can be a Universal boot installer on Intel and PPC Macs that I have had new experiences since '86 which derailed me.
    One last piece of information: I finally tried the restore to firewire partition of the Leopard DVD partitioned to APM from my powerbook G4. It doess boot and install properly on PPC and Intel Macs.
    Hopefully a few of you will benefit from my experience and settle into a love affair with Leopard.

    Oh forgot two other symptoms of the no good restore install;
    Mac Pro was obviously slow and sluggish and I could take the widget after activating them and drag along the tear tearing it in pieces and making the dock just disappear slowly in chunks.

  • Restoring my System with Time Machine to a new HD without the Snow Leopard DVD

    Hi there,
    I changed my HD in my MacBook Pro to a bigger one and then wanted to Restore the System via Time Machine onto that new HD. Sadly I dont have the Snow Leopard DVD that was coming with the MacBook. Though I have another Snow Leopard DVD, that I purchased earlier for my older Mac. Now the Problem:
    When I try to Boot the Macbook Pro from the older Snow Leopard DVD it always freezes and says: "You have to restart your Macbook. Press the power button until it switches off and then press the button again". But iwill not boot from the DVD.
    Is there another possibility to Restore my System from my Time Machine Backup to the new HD?
    Kind Regards
    Lounginbob

    lounginBob wrote:
    Though I have another Snow Leopard DVD, that I purchased earlier for my older Mac.
    You can't use a machine specific OS X install disk with another model of Mac.
    It has to do with hardware drivers being on one disk and not applicable to another machine, why you get the kernel panic.
    Is there another possibility to Restore my System from my Time Machine Backup to the new HD?
    No. You need the OS X install disk.
    Choices depending on what your machine is:
    1: If your machine with the missing OS X install disk originally came with 10.6.3 or later, call Apple for machine specific replacement disks, there will be a fee of course. That's the only ones that will work.
    2: If your machine originally came with 10.6.2 or earlier, you can choose to buy the 10.6.3 retail disk from Apple online, however it contains no free iLife. It comes faster.
    3: If your machine originally came with 10.0 - 10.6.2, and you want the free iLife, then order the machine specific versions from Apple, however it might take longer.
    4: If your machine originally came with 10.5, and your now on 10.6.x via the 10.6.3 retail disk, you can extract the free iLife from the 10.5 disks using Pacifist from CharlesSoft if you don't want to buy iLife.
    You will need this disk regardless in case you need to #18 Reinstall Just OS X or #20 Erase and Install OS X or perform #4-#6 repair proceedures:
    Step by Step to fix your Mac
    Is there another possibility...
    Yes, once you have gotten a new OS X install disk, consider making bootable clones.
    It's software that can clone your entire OS X drive/partition (no Bootcamp or Filevaulted) to another external drive and you can easily hold the option key to boot from it.
    Most commonly used backup methods explained

  • XP can't see the CDFS Boot Camp Volume on Leopard DVD with New MBP

    My new MBP 2.4 works fine in OSX aside from this annoying issue where my fresh XP Bootcamp install doesn't detect the PC compatible image on the Leopard Install DVD1 disc to run the Boot Camp installer program and load the drivers and software. At first I thought it could possibly be my superdrive but after checking the disc on the XP and Vista machines in the house including the one with Macdrive on they can't pickup the Boot Camp installer either. My old retail Leopard DVD does work perfectly, but as the new MBP has newer drivers than the original image and the 2.1 update only the sound driver has been installed
    I've put a support request ordering the replacement DVD's but they aren't due to arrive till the 21-24th Dec (sent by UK Royal Mail means after the 27th) and when my Thinkpad CPU fan broke last night I need this XP setup for work fixing Windows boxes a lot sooner than 10 days.
    Has anyone got any ideas where I can get the newer drivers in any kind of format on the internet so I can get XP up and running before Santa arrives?

    Hi,
    sorry to hear of such bad luck.
    Sadly there is no official download possibility for the drivers you need.
    Unless someone has put them on a Torrent site...
    Since even your Windows PC can't read the Windows portion of the OSX DVD it is most likely that they are defect.
    But you still try this procedure for gaining access to it http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=20060823101421566
    Regards
    Stefan

  • Upgrade HDD using Time Machine, but no Snow Leopard DVD, only Leopard installation DVD = kernel error on startup

    Hi guys and girls.
    Background
    I have a MacBook Pro (March 2009 vintage).  It was loaded with OS X Leopard on a 250GB HDD.  When Snow Leopard was released, I upgraded using a DVD bought from Apple.  In time, I added an external USB HDD to use for Time Machine Backups.  I am now, however, knocking up against the capacity limit of the original hard drive.
    Given the above, plus the fact that I no longer appear to have the Snow Leopard DVD (upgrade version I believe) - what is the recommended way to get back to my old setup (files, OS, settings etc), but with my new, larger HDD?
    So far I have tried:
    1. Formatting new HDD as Mac OS Extended (journaled), GUID partition having booted using my original (Leopard) installation DVD.  I then selected the latest Time Machine (Snow Leopard) backup.  After a couple of hours of restoring from that backup, the system restarted, but had kernel errors on bootup.
    2. As above, but when formatting, chose to zero all data.  This had the same end result.
    Questions:
    1. Are the kernel errors I'm experiencing due to the mismatch of booting off Leopard and restoring a Snow Leopard backup?
    2. Would finding my (or even a) Snow Leopard upgrade DVD help?  If so, how?
    3. What am I doing wrong generally?  I do like to try to understand these things!
    4. As above, what is the recommended way of doing what I'm trying to do, given the limitations of release DVDs etc.
    Many thanks

    Simplest thing would be to buy the retail SL installation disc ($20 USD) and use it to do the migration. There might be an issue trying to use a SL TM version with Leopard.

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