Question on upgrade from Lion 10.7.5 to Mavericks

I have Lion 10.7.5 and I am trying to upgrade to Mavericks 10.9. I follow the straight forward instructions and then when I get to the App store panel and click the download button the Star spins and then nothing happens. I am logged in with my apple ID 

To determine if it is actually downloading use Launchpad. You should see a fairly obvious new icon with an associated progress bar. Make sure you check every Launchpad page by swiping left / right.
If it's paused, click the icon to restart it.
Once it completes the icon will appear in Applications and Launchpad, it's just easier to find in Launchpad.
When it's finished downloading it looks like this:
If it really is not downloading read Mac App Store: How to resume interrupted downloads
Open the Mac App Store.
From the Store menu, choose Sign In.
Enter your Apple ID and password.
Click Purchases to get to your Purchases Page.
Click the Resume button next to the app name.

Similar Messages

  • I am trying to upgrade from Lion 10.7.5 to mavericks, it says I need 10.9 before 10.9.5. I cannot find 10.9, any suggestions?

    Upgrading from Lion 10.7.5 to Maverick, will not allow upgrade to 10.9.5, says I need 10.9, which I cannot find. Any suggestions?

    You probably downloaded the 10.9.5 Update, which only updates previous versions of Mavericks.
    Mavericks itself is only available through the App Store:
    https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/os-x-mavericks/id675248567?mt=12

  • While intending to perform a clean install of Mountain Lion while continuing with old apps and files, is it a waste to restore a backup that was made while running Mountain Lion as an UPgrade from Lion?

    While intending to perform a clean install of Mountain Lion while continuing with old apps and files, is it a waste to restore a backup that was made while running Mountain Lion as an UPgrade from Lion?
    Originally I was running Mountain Lion as an UPgrade from Lion. I created a backup in Time Machine, performed a clean install of Mountain Lion, then I proceeded to use Time Machine to restore the back up.
    When thinking about the essence of a back up restore, it occurrs to me that for all I know, I may have just wated my time IF Time Machine also restores all the old unneeded files that remain from Lion after an upgrade.
    Since the backup was made while running Mountain Lion as an upgrade from Lion, did restoring this backup defeat the purpose of a clean install by reinstalling old Lion files?
    If so, how can I re-do the last portion of the process so that I get all my home-folder files and apps back without the full bulk of old Lion files? Migration assistant I'm guessing?
    -Chris

    Hello John!
    Thank you for your response which solved my problem. For other users who may stumble upon this, I'll clear up the confusion and share how I solved the problem with your help; When looking for answers to my computer problems, finding unresolved questions where person B offers a solution and person A never comes back and says "That worked, thank you.", it demonstrates a "k-thnx-bye" user mentality that leaves others with the same problem lost. Without further ado:
    It is not clear what you did because the meaning of "clean install" is vague. You can erase a volume and install an OS which leaves none of its previous content intact,
    This is what I did: I erased the volume leaving no previous content intact, while then installing OS X Mountain Lion.
    or you can upgrade an existing OS (or reinstall the same one) which does not alter your user - installed files.
    An upgrade to Mountain Lion from Lion is what I started with initially before erasing anything. This was undesirable. Since this can cause Macs to run slower (especially whereas I'm using a mid-2011 Mac Mini), my goal was to go from operating within an upgrade to Mountain Lion, to operating within an installation of Montain Lion that was not preceded by any other oprating system.
    Hence a "clean install of Mountain Lion while continuing with old apps and files" is confusing.
    Well put and understood. What I should have said was:
    1.Erase the volume
    2.Install Mountain Lion clean
    3.Confirm that Mountain Lion is functioning properly
    4.Proceed to use either Time Machine or Migration Assistant to Import/Migrate/Copy over only two things; My old apps (That had been stored originally in the designated Applications folder) and all files and folders originally stored in the home folder under users.
    If you restore from a Time Machine backup then all modifications that occurred subsequent to that backup become erased. It renders moot any OS X upgrade performed subsequent to that backup.
    That makes sense and is just as I later suspected.
    If so, how can I re-do the last portion of the process so that I get all my home-folder files and apps back without the full bulk of old Lion files? Migration assistant I'm guessing?
    Yes.
    This is what I did and everything works perfectly. Thank you so much once again!
    -Chris

  • How can I upgrade from Lion OS X to Mountain Lion OS X

    Hi my question is "How can I upgrade from Lion OS X to Mountain Lion OS X?"
    I don't want to lose any data from my current Lion OS X, at the same time I don't have enough external HDD to backup. I tried to do the same was as http://www.apple.com/osx/how-to-upgrade/ says but I didn't get Mountain Lion OS X as an option for update.
    Pleade advice,
    Mustafa

    Well, right.  In 99.99% of cases you shouldn't lose any data.
    But if something goes wrong, well, if you don't have a backup you're SOL.
    You truly don't have ANY drive that you're using for Time Machine?
    FYI: It's not a matter of IF, but WHEN, your hard drive will fail.  It will eventually happen, so you should have a backup, unless you don't have any data you care about.

  • Will I be able to upgrade from Lion to Mavericks?

    First, I know my machine will handle Mavericks, that's not my question.  What I want to know is:
    If I have Lion now, will I be able to upgrade from Lion to Mavericks for the Mavericks price quoted, or will I have to upgrade to Mt. Lion and then Mavericks?  I was going to upgrade to Mt. Lion right about now, but don't want to pay for two upgrades within 3 or 4 months if I don't have to.

    If everything goes like in Mountain Lion, you should be able to upgrade to Mavericks from any OS X version with the App Store: Snow Leopard, Lion and Mountain Lion, always that your MacBook Pro is supported, thing that we don't know yet until Apple releases the requirements. Note that this may change with the final version

  • Upgrade from Lion.

    Hi, all.
    I am upgrading from Lion and want to know the easiest and most reliable way to do it. I've been told by others on this forum it is better to do a fresh install rather than to install over an existing Lion installation. This is what I've planned to do.
    I have already performed a back-up of my system drive. I used CCC (Carbon Copy Cloner) and backed up my entire system drive to a folder on an external drive. I plan now to re-format my system drive, perform a fresh install of Mountain Lion and then install all my personal/user stuff.
    This is my question:
    What is the best way to do this ? Should I manually install all my stuff or is it safer/better/easier to choose the option to import my data from another mac installation ? Will this option install my applications including their licenses, preferences and other user-related information ?
    Thank you in advance.

    The upgrade install will not touch account directories in /Users. You may need to re-install non-Apple applications, lost or confused by the upgrade. You may not want to keep that external image of your current install mounted, as  the App Store does look on the current drive and any mounted OS X drive and gets confused about install versus upgrade status. Happened to me yesterday with iMovie update. Sees two identical Apple ID and gives up. Until you configure them in their respective System Preferences, TimeMachine and Spotlight will include your external drive in their activity at significant performance cost.
    After the upgrade, run Disk Utility to repair permissions on the upgrade install.
    Make sure your printer drivers are current after the upgrade. You may need to re-add your printer in preferences.
    If you have a v4.4 copy of Disk Warrior on an external OS X disk, you might want to evaluate your present state of system file directory (not physical disk) fragmentation after the upgrade. If it is over 25% (like mine was on the 500GB drive), running DW to rebuild this directory resulted in noticeable file access performance. This is a nice, non-destructive tool.
    On the mini, my first ML was an update from Lion. I added a low-cost ($99) SSD that received a clean install of ML and is my primary boot drive.

  • Hi i upgrade from lion to mountain lion to day on my mini mac,Since the upgrade i am getting no sound through my HDMI cable which was working fine on lion Checked the midi audio settings and system preferences to out on HDMi nothing no sound whats so ever

    Hi i upgraded from lion to mountain lion to day on my mini mac,Since the upgrade i am no longer getting sound through my HDMI cable which was working fine on lion Checked the midi audio settings and system preferences to out on HDMi nothing no sound whats so ever.Any one any ideas?
    I use a samsung TV for my monitor via HDMI.Tried all the system Audi setting nothing .Head phone and internal speakers are fine.

    Similar issue; Audio was working fine on Lion, now not on Mountain Lion. Have a Macbook Pro early 2011 with AMD Radeon HD 6750M, connected by thunderbolt through a Lacie LBD to a mini-displayport to HDMI adapter (n.b. same problem when not going through the LBD) to a Pioneer VSX 521 AV receiver. For me when I go into audio Midi settings all the volume sliders for the displayport device are greyed out and at zero. But when I click 'configure speakers', it's able to send out the test signals to each speaker. Part of the problem could be that I'm not getting the option to put out 6channel sound, only 2 or 8 channel. Since my system is Dolby 5.1, and I only have 6 speakers, I would have expected the 6ch option to be available. But I imagine there's more to it than that. Elsewhere someone has suggested playing with Remote Interactive over HD on an Onkyo device; I'll see if there's something similar on the Pioneer that can be changed. Any other suggestions welcome.

  • Windows 7 no longer boots after upgrade from Lion to Mountain Lion

    I got a late 2011 MacBook Pro, on which I installed Windows 7 with Boot Camp. After I upgraded from Lion to Mountain Lion, I can no longer boot Windows. If I keep the option button pressed during boot I only get the OS X and recovery options, and if I choose to boot Windows from the system preferences pane, I get a message that says that no bootable device was found. However, I'm sure that the partition is still there, because I can see it in finder and browse the files normally. How can I boot Windows again?

    "Easier" in this case as an alternative is defined as repartitioning/reformatting your disk, and restoring from backups (which for most people also means starting from scratch with Boot Camp Assistant and Windows since most users aren't backing that environment up).
    What you did is, in my opinion, easier and faster. But if you don't know what you're doing can lead to data loss. But then, by definition, blowing away your disk and starting over with a restored backup begins with data loss!

  • Need help upgrading from Lion 10.6.8 to Lion 10.7.2.

    I want to upgrade from Lion 10.6.8 to Lion 10.7.2 in order to use iCloud that is on my other devices.  The software updater on my Mac says there are no updates available.  What to do to get the latest OS?

    10.6.8 is Snow Leopard, not Lion. Lion is 10.7.x. Select About This Mac from the Apple menu. The installed version will be shown in the display window.
    If you are running 10.7 or 10.7.1 you can download the OS X Lion Update 10.7.2 Client Combo.

  • What are the benifits of upgrading from Lion to Mountain Lion?

    I'm looking for the benifits of upgrading from Lion to Mountain Lion

    You cannot upgrade to Mountain Lion anymore. Mavericks is now the current version. Got to Apple's website to see what the features of Mavericks are, then decide if upgrading is something you should do.
    Upgrading to Mavericks
    You can upgrade to Mavericks from Lion or directly from Snow Leopard. Mavericks can be downloaded from the Mac App Store for FREE.
    Upgrading to Mavericks
    To upgrade to Mavericks you must have Snow Leopard 10.6.8 or Lion installed. Download Mavericks from the App Store. Sign in using your Apple ID. Mavericks 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.
          Macs that can be upgraded to OS X Mavericks
             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.

  • Why would upgrading from Lion to Mountain Lion more than double the size of my Time Machine backup?

    I have a 500GB Time Capsule that has 248 GB used. After upgrading from Lion to Mountain Lion, Time Machine reported that there was no longer enough room on the TC to complete the backup. Surely the new system files aren't taking up over 200GB? Does it somehow want to copy all of my user files again, even though the vast majority of those haven't changed since the previous backup?
    I'd like not to have to upgrade to a larger TC just because of a system upgrade.
    Thanks in advance.

    If it is working as expected, what do you need with the old backup?
    If you want to be able to go back to where you were prior to an upgrade, isolate that backup and don't use it again. As far as Time Machine can tell, the whole drive changed.
    The link I posted contains probably everything that anybody knows about Time Machine and how to manipulate it to work as you would like as opposed to how it was designed to work. There are FAQs to continue a backup as opposed to starting fresh, but I wouldn't recommend it for the reasons above. Pondini probably doesn't, either.
    If you are going to do a wholesale upgrade of the OS, I would create a bootable clone using something like Carbon Copy Cloner or Super Duper. A bootable clone on an external drive can have you back up and running instantly if the upgrade fails in any way. If the upgrade goes fine, store it away in case you find the current system isn't to your liking.

  • Can I upgrade from Lion OS X 10.7.5 to Mavericks 10.9.4?

    Can I upgrade from Lion OS X 10.7.5 to Mavericks 10.9.4?

    Yes, if your Mac is compatible; the Mac App Store will check this before allowing the upgrade to be downloaded.
    (111277)

  • Can't upgrade from Lion 10.7.4 to 10.7.5.

    I keep trying unsuccessfully to upgraded from Lion 10.7.4 to 10.7.5.  I keep getting an error that says to power down and restart after the upgrade.  Is there a work around for this?  I'm worried that my security updates aren't being done.  I also cannot upgrade from Lion to Mountain Lion either.  I have successfully restored everything from time machine backup several times.  Just can't update.  My MBP is a late 2008 5,1.  In an effort not to flood this forum, my specs are at http://pastebin.com/kCdgnG5T. 
    Thanks,
    tsairox

    I've tried the MacOSXCombo update with pressing the Option key upon restarting with no success before my first post here (then restored the whole system), but not the Shift key you're speaking of.  Do you feel this will make a big difference?
    Thanks,
    tsairox

  • I don't want Mavericks yet, how do I upgrade from Lion to Mountain Lion?

    Been reading lots of good and bad about Mavericks so I'm not ready to upgrade from Lion to Mavericks yet.  I would like to upgrade my OS to Mountain Lion.  How can I do this when the App store doesn't offer Mountain Lion anymore?
    Thanks

    http://store.apple.com/us_smb_78313/product/D6377Z/A/os-x-mountain-lion-consumer -single

  • How do I upgrade from Lion to Snow Leopard?

    Snow Leopard has this great feature called Expose which is a great improvement on Lion's App Expose (and Mission Control).
    Can someone point me to the steps I need to take to upgrade from Lion to Snow Leopard?

    Written just for you (ok it's a paste)
    Back to Snow Leopard from Lion install method
    Read and print out these instructions, your computer is going to be offline and you wil be cutoff from help until your machine is restored.
    Clear the Desktop, Downloads and Trash of anything you wish to keep by placing their files in the respective Documents, Music, Pictures, Movie folders.
    Disconnect other drives except the backup drive as to avoid any mistake.
    Backup ALL your Users folders (Documents, Pictures, Movies, Music etc) manually (drag and drop methods) to a (not TimeMachine) external powered drive (HFS+ journaled formatted in Disk Utility) and disconnect, your going to be wiping the entire disk of ALL DATA. (warning, everything will be gone and not recovered, OS, programs, files, Windows etc all gone.)
    Note: You might want to hold c and boot off the 10.6 installer disk and use Disk Utility to format the new blank external drive instead of using OS X Lion that's hosed. Then reboot into Lion and copy files, be safer that way perhaps.
    Here we go!
    Hold c and boot off the 10.6 installer disk that comes with your computer and second screen in just STOP there, don't install OS X yet.
    Look at the Utilities Menu for Disk Utility.
    On the left is the name of your hard drive maker, click it and Erase (format HFS+ Journaled), give it the same drive name as before, and click Erase...
    (note: if you want to "scrub" the drive of old files that haven't been overwritten yet, then use the Security Option > Zero Erase, takes a lot longer)
    This should wipe the drive of ALL partitions (GUID, OS X and 10.7 Recovery, Windows if present)
    When it's done, quit and install OS X 10.6. Then install all your programs from fresh sources and validate/update.
    When you setup a first account, use the same user name as before, this way you can simply drag and drop the content of your previous Users folders from the external drive right back into the new Users folders and everything should work peachy. Links in iTunes to music, playlists and iPhoto links especially.
    Update OS X to 10.6.8 using the Combo Update for best results.
    http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1399
    (Note: If your original machine had 10.5 and you want the free iLife that comes with the disks with the computer, then you'll have to install 10.5 first using the same c boot/erase/format methods as above, then update to 10.6 via the disk, then Combo Update 10.6.8)
    Final step optional but highly recommended.
    A lot of people use a Carbon Copy Clone of their boot drive to a new HFS+Journaled external drive (used only for this purpose) as a "hold the option key" bootable backup in case something goes wrong with their boot drive or need to restore to a previous OS X version..  (in addition to TimeMachine drive for more immediate backups.)
    It's not advised to have a Bootable Clone and a TimeMachine partition on the same external drive, as two drives gives hardware protection in case one fails.

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