Snow Leopard Bootable USB Flash Drive with Lion

I'd like to create a bootable Snow Leopard Flash Drive, after upgrading to Lion. I have multiple Macs with some expensive legacy software and an Apple USB modem (32 bit) I use out in rural areas. I'm assuming this will be a viable solution - is there something I'm overlooking? Has anyone else out there taken this route?
Thank you.

That would have to be a fairly large flash drive in order to install OS X and any PPC aps on it.  You'd be much better off installing Snow Leopard on a separate partition on your internal HDD or an external one. (Since you have multiple macs, installing on an external HDD seems to be best.

Similar Messages

  • Boot problem - Snow Leopard on USB flash drive

    Built a fresh install of 10.6 on a USB flash drive.  The steps I took to do this were:
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    Booted to external drive, installed updates to get to 10.6.8.
    Carbon Copy Cloaner the external firewire OS to a 32gb Patriot USB drive
    Removed the external drive, then forced the station to boot to the USB drive
    The behavior I get is a startup chime, then the grey Apple logo, but NO spinning gear.  No other types of signs or symbols come up for roughly 5 minutes. The system then reboots itself and chimes.  Then repeat until I hard shutdown and make it boot back to the Mac Pro's internal HDD.
    I also tried installing the OS disc directly to the flash drive ( after formatting it ) but it does the same thing.  Chime - logo - no gears - reboot.
    The drive itself works as I've used it for other purposes and I can see the files on there.  The access light is blinking so it appears to be trying to communicate with the computer.
    Did I miss a step somewhere?

    http://www.maciverse.com/install-os-x-snow-leopard-from-usb-flash-drive.html
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/16276201#16276201

  • Encrypted USB Flash Drive with Lion OS X questions

    Like many of us, we don't want our USB flash drives lost with our valuable data on them.  So I've used the encryption function in Lion OS X in Disk Utility to make an encrypted flash drive.  This has some limitations as I read but what I want to know is can I use this usb drive on a DIFFERENT computer that also has OS X Lion?  I don't have another mac w/ lion to test it on. 
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    Basically, I'd like to use the most user friendly type of way of securing my files and data on USB flash drives.  I have tried TrueCrypt and have it installed but I just don't prefer using it.  I like the simplicity of the former approach, though it has it's limitations.

    NightBird wrote:
    This is important to me because I've got a laptop and God forbid, but if it was stolen or destroyed, will I be able to access my USB drive with important data on it by plugging it into another mac computer w/ lion? 
    How about any computer instead?
    Hardware based encryption is superior to software encryption which can be hacked or not available if your needs change.
    This will work with any computer, and has a nice keychain so you can attach to something like your wrist or retractable key cable.
    http://www.amazon.com/IronKey-Secure-Hardware-Encrypted-Flash-D20402A/dp/B000RXY V5U
    There are also hardware based encypted external hard drives with their own keys and password keypads, also work with any computer if your needs are larger then a USB can handle.

  • Bootable MacOSX 10.6 Snow Leopard emergency USB flash drive boot disk

    I want to create a minimal recovery boot disk for SL. I've followed how-to's on creating one for 10.4 and 10.5, but so far it I couldn't get it to work with 10.6.
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    I found this article:
    [2009 Live DVD, howto make a simple, working osx livedvd|http://www.insanelymac.com/forum/index.php?showtopic=144128]
    Here's the overview of the method presented there:
    How it works:
    This method works because OSX has a disk image boot system in place to support its network boot system. IOHDIXController and kernel can take a path to disk image supplied to them, and mount it as /, via "imageboot", which recognizes a disk image as an attachable filesystem.
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    Normally the shadowfile is created on a local disk or network share, on either nfs or hfs. Under my method, the shadowfile is created on ramdisk formatted with hfs, and the system behaves exactly as if it were booted with netboot. The difference is that I specify that the dmg to boot from is local(file:///), and then manually start a customized rc script. The script behaves like rc.netboot, except i create a ramdisk and setup the shadowfile there instead of on a local disk. After that / is R/W and OS X boots normally into finder...and beyond.
    Got that?!

  • How to create bootable USB thumb drive from Lion on Mac Mini 2011?

    Hello folks
    Yesterday my new Mac Mini (Core i7 2,7 Ghz, 4 GB RAM, ATI Radeon HD6630M 256 MB) arrived. It replaces my old Mac Mini (Core Duo 1,83 Ghz, 2 GB RAM, Intel GMA950 64 MB). One day I'll replace the 500 GB 5400 RPM HDD in this Mini by an Intel SSD drive (just like I did with my previous Mini). I'll do a fully clean install then (formatting the SSD drive in Disk Utility and then installing Lion on it from a bootable USB thumb drive). The only problem is I can't seem to download Lion for free from the Mac AppStore (MAS) although I have bought a new Mac Mini which came with Lion pre-installed. I know how to create a bootable USB thumb drive with Lion on it when you download it from the MAS. But that's the problem... I can't seem to download Lion from the MAS for free. When I open the MAS while holding down the Option key I can download Lion but it will charge me for it. Is there any way I can download Lion from the MAS without paying for it? Since it already came with my new Mac Mini 2011 this should be possible I guess?
    And will I still be able to download the iLife '11 apps (iPhoto, iMovie and Garageband) for FREE that came with my new Mac Mini when I do a fully clean install as described above? Thanks in advance.
    Greetings
    Jocau

    After doing some research, it seems that there are only 2 WAYS to do a complete reinstall of Lion on the Mac Mini 2011 without paying for the Lion download in the Mac AppStore (i.e. recreating every partition, also the Recovery HD partition, from scratch e.g. when installing Lion on a clean HDD/SSD).
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    2) Use the LION INTERNET RECOVERY feature built-in into new Macs that ship with Lion (this feature is present in new Macs starting from the Mac Mini 2011 and Macbook Air 2011).
    OS X Lion: About Lion Recovery 
    Lion Internet Recovery
    If you happen to encounter a situation in which you cannot start from the Recovery HD, such as your hard drive stopped responding or you installed a new hard drive without Mac OS X installed, new Mac models introduced after public availability of OS X Lion automatically use the Lion Internet Recovery feature if the Recovery HD (Command-R method above) doesn't work. Lion Internet Recovery lets you start your Mac directly from Apple's Servers. The system runs a quick  test of your memory and hard drive to ensure there are no hardware issues.
    Lion Internet Recovery presents a limited interface at first, with only the ability to select your preferred Wi-Fi network and, if needed, enter the WPA passphrase. Next, Lion Internet Recovery will download and start from a Recovery HD image. From there, you are offered all the same utilities and functions described above.
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    Restoring iLife applications after Internet Restore of OS X Lion
    If you reinstall Lion on a new Mac that shipped with OS X Lion installed, on an erased or replaced hard drive, you can download iPhoto, iMovie, and GarageBand from the Mac App Store.
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    Double-click the App Store icon in the dock.
    Enter your Apple ID and password.
    Click Purchases.
    If you haven't previously accepted your bundled iLife applications within the Mac App Store, you should see your iLife applications appear in the Accept portion of the screen. Click Accept.
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    Source: Lion Recovery
    It's a bit sad that these seem to be the only 2 options. Lion Internet Recovery is the preferred one here since my monthly internet traffic limit isn't a problem (but my download speed is). This problem could have been easily solved by Apple by just checking the system specs or serial number when trying to download Lion from the Mac AppStore. By using one of the 2 options in my previous sentence the Mac AppStore could see that I have a new Mac Mini 2011 that ships with Lion which would give me the option to download Lion from the Mac AppStore for free and eventually create a bootable USB thumb drive of it.

  • Using bootable USB flash drive to partition internal HDD

    I just got my B5400 with Windows 8 x64 and UEFI. I found out that you can't lower the size of the hard drive by a lot. I want to split my HDD into 250GB and 666GB, one for the OS and one for data obviously. Therefore I tried the tool windows offered me but it said that I couldn't make a smaller drive because system relevant data are working at the moment. 
    So after searching the web I found out, that I have to use a bootable USB flash drive with something like Gparted running, to partition the HDD without any errors. I formatted my USB drive to FAT32 and made it a bootable stick with a program offered on the official website of gparted. I eagerly wanted to use it and plugged it in. Still booting into Windows. So I went into UEFI and checked the settings. I disabled secure boot mode and made it that legacy comes first. Then I chose 'USB HDD flash drive' in the boot manager and exited saving changes. I started my laptop and hit enter to et to the boot manager, made sure to select my USB drive and then confirmed it. It booted into Windows. I don't even understand why it is that way. It is like everything is set up correctly, but still it's trolling me.
    I would appreciate any help greatly. And to make clear, I don't want to burn a CD or DVD, I want it to be working with a USB drive.

    Hello,
    search the web for "yummi bootmanager", it's free and easy to use.
    If you got OKR (OneKeyRecovery) on your device, it will not longer work with resized parititions.
    Have a nice day
    LENOVO IDEAPAD Z710 59403383,i7-4700MQ,8 GB DDR3-RAM,1.920 x 1.080 Pixel,NVIDIA® GeForce® GT 740M,Hybrid (1 TB S-ATA + 8GB SSD)

  • Hi, I have a late 2008 iMac with a new hard drive. How do I install Mountain Lion from my bootable USB flash drive.

    How do I install Mountain Lion to a new hard drive without having the recovery partition on it.
    I have the USB flash drive with software on it but when I switch my Mac on all I have is a white screen & a flashing question mark.
    ATB,
    Steve.

    Did you use LionDiskMaker or DiskMaker X?
    Boot the machine with the option key down until you see your bootable USB stick.  Select the latter, and reboot.
    When the installer boots up, you will first need to choose Utilities and Disk Utility. Select the target HD device name and then the partition tab. Select 1 partition, name it Macintosh HD. Format is Mac OS Extended, and option is GUID. Apply. Exit Disk Utility and return to the installer, which will now show your newly partitioned HD as available for install.
    When OS X is installed and all updates applied, press shift+command+U and run disk utility again. Verify/repair permissions and verify the boot disk.

  • Making a bootable USB flash drive from PC

    My DVD drive on Imac is broken and won't recognize anything. It doesn't show up on disk utility and I can't make dmg file from it.
    So I have snow leopard DVD and I want to make a bootable USB flash drive on PC. I want to know how to copy the image from snow leopard dvd on PC. (windows xp)
    Please help!

    AFAIK, you can't use a PC. Consider one of these:
    http://www.amazon.com/LG-Super-Multi-SecurDisc-LightScribe-GE24LU20/dp/B003TTK2X 4/ref=lhni_t
    http://www.lg.com/us/computer-products/optical-media/LG-external-dvd-burner-GE24 LU20.jsp
    http://www.amazon.com/LaCie-16X-LightScribe-DVDRW-300982U/dp/B000BMNM9I#moreAbou tThisProduct

  • My MacBook Pro, 1.83 GHz Intel Core Duo gives me an error message during Lion install. My Intel Duo Core is not an Intel Duo Core and cannot install Lion.  I already have Snow Leopard what is the problem with Lion?

    My MacBook Pro, 1.83 GHz Intel Core Duo gives me an error message during Lion install. My Intel Duo Core is not an Intel Duo Core and cannot install Lion.  I already have Snow Leopard what is the problem with Lion?

    You need a "Core 2 Duo" for lion, and I'm guessing you only have a "Core Duo"  My wife's macbook is also a "Core Duo" and has Snow Leapord, but cannot install Lion.....

  • Does anybody know how to install Snow Leopard on an external HD with Lion?

    My MacBook Pro came from apple with Lion OS X 10.7.1 installed and it doesn't operate with Pro Tools LE 8.0.5 (or any other version for that matter and PT 9.0.5 is only in beta) So, I'm looking to partition Snow Leopard OS X 10.6 to my external HD so I can bypass the issue without compromising and downgrading my MacBook Pro (which I've been told is not possible anyway but I'm sure there is a way) and having to A) Pay out more money to avid and get PT 9 ( BETA) or B) Run a different DAW (Also costing more $$$) Any help would be MUCH appreciated!!!

    Yes it's possible, you need another Firewire capable Mac#2 that can hold c boot off the 10.6.3 Snow Leopard Retail Disks and a Firewire cable and if necessary a FW 800 to 400 adapter.
    First you boot into Lion on Mac#1 and use Disk Utility to Erase Free Space, this will take a few hours.
    Then backup your data off the Mac#1 Lion partition to a external drive and disconnect. (for safety sake)
    Then you create a second partition on the drive in Disk Utility, formatted OS X Extended (Journaled) under the Partition Tab.
    While that is all going on, on the other Mac#2 that can boot off 10.6.3 disks, you do the same thing,
    First you boot into Snow or Lion on Mac#2 and use Disk Utility to Erase Free Space, this will take a few hours.
    Then backup the data off the Mac#2 main boot partition to a external drive and disconnect. (for safety sake)
    Then you create a second partition on the drive in Disk Utility, formatted OS X Extended (Journaled) under the Partition Tab.
    Hold c and boot Mac#2 off the 10.6.3 Retail Snow Leopard Disk (won't work with grey disks unless it matches the target machine model) and install onto the new partition on Mac#2, reboot holding option key and select the 10.6.3 partition, once in, use the Combo Update to get to 10.6.8. (must do)
    Reboot holding T this Lion Mac#1 so it's in Target Disk Mode, connect the Firewire cable to the other Mac#2, then hold option key and reboot into the second partition on Mac#2. Download and use Carbon Copy Cloner to clone the new partition of Mac#2 to new partition of Mac#1
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    If that doesn't work, you need to combine the 10.6.3 and the 10.6.8 Combo Update together in this process at the link below, and apply the 10.6.3 + 10.6.8 combined image in the same Target Disk mode fashion
    https://discussions.apple.com/thread/3264421?start=0&tstart=0
    Another method is if you can convince Apple to send you the 10.6.6 install disks for your machine, then use the Target Disk Mode approach to circumvent the firmware which is preventing you from booting off install disks from any previous version of OS X.
    For example, my new 2011 MBP came with 10.6.6 grey install disks, but can't boot off the 10.6.3 Snow Leopard Retail Disks.
    Another method would be to find another same exact machine as yours, came with 10.6.6 from the factory (even if upgraded to Lion it should still boot 10.6.6), thus will boot off the 10.6.6 install disks and install it onto your parttion.
    Needless to say, after going through all this, you really need to make a clone of the partition once it's successfully installed.
    Set the startup disk in system preferences to Snow.
    https://discussions.apple.com/message/16276201#16276201

  • Installing Leopard from USB flash drive

    Basically i need to install Leopard from a USB flash drive on my Macbook, but i will sum up my issue: (I'm afraid i'm not a computer-"geek", so bear with me when i try to explain the issue :-))
    My macbook hdd recently died on me, so put in a new, clean hdd. I now need to install Leopard on the new hdd from a DMG-file.
    So, i have an 8GB USB flash drive and DMG-file of Leopard.
    I formatted the USB flash drive to NTFS, and copied the 6+GB DMG-file onto the flash drive.
    I tried booting from the flash drive by holding down the option key, but a blank screen shows up with a mouse pointer. There is no Flash drive or install icon to select.
    Can anyone tell me, what i'm doing wrong?

    Hi Dweepe;
    On top of everything else the other posters pointed out, I would suggest that formatting the USB flash drive to NTFS is not doing you any favors either. NTFS is a propriety file system from Microsoft which the Mac can only read with special software install.
    My suggestion is to replace your optical drive. A new one can probably be purchased for much less then the problems you are creating for yourself in your attempts to work around replacing it.
    Allan

  • Booting from hard disks 2TB - bootable USB flash drive GRUB (w/o OS)?

    Hi,
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    I don't know about the answers to your issues, as I have never tried any disks that large.  But it would probably be wise not to mention that you are trying to do this on a non Arch system, as now I am pretty sure you will not recieve the help you desire.
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  • Booting from Win 7 bootable USB flash drive?

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  • How to delete recovery in volume D and transfer it to bootable USB flash drive.

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  • USB flash drive with G4, OS9.2

    Just bought a 256Mb USB flash drive to help friend move data from old iMac to new core duo (lucky s*d). tried it first at home - works Ok on my eMac (10.4), but when plug it into my G4 (OS9.2), get the old 'this disc is unreadable, do you wish to initialise?) message (that takes me back a few years!). Should I format it? If so maybe it won't then work with my eMac. I think OS9 has a USB mass storage driver somewhere, but can't find it. Maybe that is the reason why G4 doesn't recognise the flash drive.
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