Snow Leopard disk

When I brought my MacBook, it came with a Snow Leopard disk,
I upgraded to Os x Lion not long ago.
My friend wants Osx Lion, but first needs to upgrade to Snow Leopard before she can get Os x Lion.
Can she use my Snow Leopard disk?
Or can my disk be only registed to one Mac?

She can't with your disk as it's specific to your Mac. She would need a retail copy (Black with X on it) to install SL.

Similar Messages

  • A magnet fell on my macbook "late 2007 series black" and it stopped working. When i start my macbook up it sits on the white screen. i tried inserting the snow leopard disk to do a clean install but the disk ejects and all i see is the pointer.help please

    A magnet fell on my macbook "late 2007 series black" and it stopped working. When i start my macbook up it sits on the white screen. i tried inserting the snow leopard disk to do a clean install but the disk ejects and all i see is the pointer. i even bought a new hard drive to do the clean install but the same thing happens. Please Help

    Your problem is not Boot Camp, in fact, is your optical drive. Win XP requires indeed sp2, but also the internal drive, does not work from external optical drive.
    For other possible tricks, please use the appropriate Boot Camp forum, not here. Mac OS X may be installed from both external and internal optical drive and/or internal/external partition of a disk, any disk. Windows is not so generous.

  • Why does my MacBook Pro not boot up with the Snow Leopard Disk?

    I have erased the entire hard drive on a 2011 macbook pro that had snow leopard on it. I was corrupted. I not insert my Snow Leopard Disk and the machine will not boot. I chose target mode to erase the hard drive from my mac book pro with Mt. Lion on it.
    Thank uou for any help,
    Ken

    Target mode?  Is there a second computer involved?  Why not insert the Snow Leopard disc in the computer on which you wish to install and hold down the C key to boot from it?
    If the disc came with a different computer it will not boot another model.  Retail discs also may not boot all model computers, even those that came with the same major version.  For example, some MBPs came with 10.6.6 but a retail disc may only be 10.6.3.

  • Can I repair a Snow Leopard disk from a Tiger machine?

    I had the hard drive go down on a MacPro with an Intel processor running OS 10.6.4.  When I try to boot, it gets to the Apple screen and shuts down.  Running the disk utility from the installation disk gives me the error:
    Checking HFS Plus Volume
    Invalid Extent Entry
    Volume Check Failed
    I pulled the drive and connected it with a USB adapter to a spare Mac G5 with a PowerPC processor running Tiger 10.4.11.  I can read the disk on the G5 with Tiger.  Disk utility on the G5 gives me the same error when trying to repair the disk. 
    Are there any utilities out there I can run on Tiger to repair the Snow Leopard disk?  Free if possible?
    Or a good OSX utility that will let me image the drive to another hard drive?  This is a production machine in a printing environment and I need to get it back up and running as soon as possible.
    Thx...
    Carvelli

    I could not repair the disk from the command line either.  It gave me the same error messages.  I did not try Carbon Copy Cloner...yet.  I had an extra 250GB drive which I re-installed 10.6.4. 
    I can bring up the old drive on the USB adapter, so I am going to try the Mac Migration Assistant.  Which I've never done before.  Does anyone know if it bring over all the applications during the migration?  Or will I have to re-install all the applications over again?
    Carvelli

  • I used my snow leopard disk to erase my hard drive. Now I want to eject the snow leopard disk to clean install from the lion boot disk I made. How do I eject the snow leopard disk?

    I used my snow leopard disk to erase my hard drive. Now I want to eject the snow leopard disk to clean install from the lion boot disk I made. How do I eject the snow leopard disk? It is the start up disk and I can't figure out how to get it out of the computer so I can put my lion boot disk in. Thanks

    turn the mac all the way off. turn the mac on by pressing the power button. as soon as the apple logo appears, pres and hold your mouse button(trackpad mouse clicker etc...) until the CD comes out.

  • On start up my Mac Book Pro shows a white screen with a spinning wheel. I have tried starting up with the Snow Leopard disk - all I get is a blue screen. I guess that this is a major repair job??????

    On start up my Mac Book Pro shows a white screen with a spinning wheel. I have tried starting up with the Snow Leopard disk - all I get is a blue screen. I guess that this is a major repair job??????

    If you have the exact same problem - take the computer to an Apple store or an AASP.  Whichever is more convenient for you.  If you have AppleCare call them!

  • When upgrading from Tiger to Snow Leopard disk just gets spit out.

    I'm trying to upgrade my 2006 MacBook Pro (Intel Core Duo with 2GB ram) from Tiger (10.4.11) to Snow Leopard. Every time I try to boot to the disk the computer just spits the disk back out. The optical drive has been replaced recently and I know it works properly. I also checked the snow leopard disk in a newer MacBook Pro and it brought up the install screen right away. Is there something wrong with my version of Tiger that it is not recognizing the Snow Leopard disk?

    Hi, is this a grsy machine specific Disc, or the Retail version?
    What is the 2z691-****-A number on it?

  • No response when installing snow leopard disk

    I bought a "wiped" machine.  I install the snow leopard disk I bought and hold down "c" key and all I get is the white screen with the grey apple logo.  disk stops spinning and that is it.  Help!!!  it is a birthday gift and I am running out of time.

    so I bought the snow leopard Mac OS X disk (per a chat with the online apple sales folks)
    Then it's almost a certainty you have a retail disk, which is good.
    I think the computer was just wiped improperly
    No matter how badly, or incorrectly a hard drive was erased, there's nothing to stop the Mac from booting to a DVD, other than the following...
    (or the age of the computer and install disk are incompatible).
    That would be the most likely reason at this point. Without knowing exactly what Mac model you purchased, this is a guess, but Snow Leopard will not boot to any Mac with a PowerPC CPU. It requires Intel.
    Somewhere on your Mac, there will be a visible serial number. Do not post it on these forums. Go to this site and enter it in the open text field. It will tell you exactly what model Mac you have, and its hardware configuration. Please note here what model Mac you have and CPU type.

  • Clean MacBook HD with Snow Leopard Disk?

    I recently purchased a new MacBook Pro and want to give my 2+ year old MacBook (first gen aluminum, shipped with Leopard and upgraded to Snow Leopard) to a friend.
    Can I clean the MacBook hard drive with a retail Snow Leopard disk or must I use the original Leopard disk that came shipped with the MacBook?
    I'm asking because I cannot seem to find the original disks but I do have the Snow Leopard package.
    I want to get rid of all photos, email, documents, etc. Basically my user account. Will it be possible to do this from the Snow Leopard disk?
    T H A N K S

    Prepare Your Mac for Sale
    Boot from the OS X Installer Disc One that came with the computer.  After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button.  When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu.  After DU loads select the startup volume from the left side list then click on the Erase tab.  Set the format type to Mac OS Extended (Journaled) then click on the Options button.  Select the one pass Zero Data option and click on the OK button.  Then click on the Erase button.
    Note: You can skip the Zero Data option if you are not concerned about removing sensitive personal data from the hard drive.  If you choose to skip this part of the process then it is possible for others to recover data from the hard drive.  The Zero Data procedure will prevent others from getting access to your personal information.
    This process will take 30 minutes to several hours depending upon the size of the hard drive.  After formatting has completed quit DU and return to the installer.  Now complete the OS X installation.  At the completion of the installation do not restart the computer.  Instead just shut it off.  The next user will be presented with the Setup Assistant when they turn on the computer just as it would if new out of the box.
    You can do this using the Snow Leopard DVD. Be sure to include the DVD with the computer. However, without the original discs that came with the computer the next user will not have access to the Apple Hardware Test dianostics or the ability to restore iLife.

  • My macbook won't read the snow leopard disk but my macbook pro does...why?

    For better or worse I ran a clean install of the original MacBook OS for an early 2008.  It had been running Lion over the years it had never been wiped and reinstalled.  In any case, I successfully reinstalled 10.5.2 with the start up disks that came with the machine when we purchased it.  (That showed me the drive was operational.)  I then attempted to install Snow Leopard with the install disk we've kept and the drive rejected it; however the MacBook Pro's drive did not reject it.  (That showed me the disk is operational as well.)
    Is the problem as simple as having to update Leopard to the max before the drive will accept the Snow Leopard disk?

    Zap the PRAM and Reset the SMC; then, try again. BTW, does the optical drive show up in Apple menu item->About this Mac->More info?

  • Can I reformat and partition a new internal hard drive with the Snow Leopard disk?

    I'm planning on installing a new internal hard drive in my 15'' Macbook Pro. Can I format and partition the new drive with the Snow Leopard disk or is it just an upgrade from Leopard? Thanks much.

    You should be able to do that.
    If you want to change the sizes of existing partitions this may help:
    Enlarging a partition

  • Snow Leopard Disk Requirement for BootCamp

    Hi,
    I'm installing Windows 7 (64-bit) on my Mac, and I was reading over the "Windows 7 FAQ's" on Apple's support site. I was a bit confused when I saw this: +"Windows 7 requires Mac OS X v10.6 Snow Leopard and the Boot Camp 3.1 Update. For complete system requirements information, see this article."+ I got my iMac in September of 2008, and I only received an OSX Leopard 10.5.2 install disk. However, I upgraded my iMac to Snow Leopard, when it came out the next year and I am running 10.6.4 right now. I have the Snow Leopard disk, that I bought from the Apple store for $29. So, is this the disk they talked about on their website, or should I use the 10.5 disk that came with my Mac?
    Thank You So Much!!!
    iMac Specs:
    20" Screen
    3 GB RAM
    250GB Hardrive
    Intel Core 2 Duo
    Mac OSX 10.6.4

    Hi,
    the Snow Leopard DVD you have bought also contains the BootCamp 3.0 drivers needed for installing WIndows 7
    After you have installed these drivers you can then download and install the 3.1 driver update for Windows 7 form here http://support.apple.com/downloads/#bootcamp
    Make sure to get the correct 64-bit package.
    And since it is a .exe file you have to install it while in Windows.
    Regards
    Stefan

  • I can't open my snow leopard disk

    When I put in my snow leopard disk it won't open. Any help

    Double click the disc icon on the Desktop.
    Click Finder in the menu then scroll down and click Preferences then select the General tab.
    If it isn't checked..  select:  Hard disks

  • Re-use Snow Leopard disk after Lion upgrade?

    I upgraded from OSX 10.4.11 to Snow Leopard (single license) on one of my two iMacs, and then installed Lion. Is my Snow Leopard disk now liberated to make the pre-Lion upgrade on the second computer, since it is no longer operating on the first one? All of the hardware meets the upgrade requirements.

    Simple answer; yes.
    As long it's not being used on more than computer at a time, you're within the terms of the licence.

  • Snow Leopard disk is not readable

    My Imac and MacbookPro is spitting the Snow Leopard disk. When I insert the disk, the machine makes some noise and then spits it out. Does anyone have any solution ?

    Try starting up to the disk. No luck? Go to an Apple Store and get a replacement on the spot in all likelihood.
    Message was edited by: donv (The Ghost)

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