Time Machine Backup of snow leopard

Can i restore a Snow Leopard Time Machine backup using the Leopard Installation disks?
I screwed up some mac's at the office and need to repair it before anyone finds out :P
thanks

Again, since Snow Leopard has not been released, we cannot discuss any aspect of it except the feature information Apple has officially announced. If you are a registered Apple developer or authorized participant in an Apple seeding program, you have special forums available to you where you can ask questions about Snow Leopard.

Similar Messages

  • I just restored my 13" MBP i5 at the apple store to the newest version of Lion after issues with a previous Time Machine backup from Snow Leopard- this time I created a new account and just ported files and folders, and now MS Office doesn't work. Help?

    I just restored my 13" MBP i5 at the apple store to the newest version of Lion after issues with a previous Time Machine backup from Snow Leopard- this time I created a new account and just ported files and folders, and now MS Office doesn't work.
    ^^ that's the main problem. Here's the full history.
    I bought a new 13" i5 MBP, early 2011 edition. I had an old white Macbook 2.14 ghz core2duo on Snow Leopard. I attempted to port over my time machine backup, but encountered problems in that my User was inaccessible from the new computer after the import finished, and I had to go in and change the root password, etc, and for some reason or another, I couldn't install any programs at all from that administrator's account. By "couldn't" I mean I could install them, but upon installation they would never boot. So, I took it to the apple store and did a clean install from the most up to date Lion OSX. Then, I created a brand new admin account, instead of trying to import the old one, and things seemed great. Then, I just imported my old files from the TM backup, but not any system settings, permissions, or user data. Just my Docs, pics, vids, apps, and itunes stuff.
    Here's where things get weird again. I imported this stuff under the name "old", but all of these folders have a red negative sign on them, marking them as restricted. So, from my main admin account, I cannot even peruse these folders. Since I didn't import user data, I can't sign in to the "old" account to change permissions. I already tried to change the permissions from system preferences, but that didn't change anything. And now, for whatever reason, of all the apps that were imported then, MS Office is the only set of apps that does not work. When I click on it, it just says there was a problem and asks if I'd like to send a report to apple. I tried reinstalling it to no avail. I'm an English student, so i really need access to Word. Can anyone help? The Apple store is a major detour for me and would like to fix this issue myself.

    Most likely you have Office 2004 which are PPC-only applications and will not work in Lion. Upgrade to Office 2011. Other alternatives are:
    Apple's iWork suite (Pages, Numbers, and Keynote.)
    Open Office (Office 2007-like suite compatible with OS X.)
    NeoOffice (similar to Open Office.)
    LibreOffice (a new direction for the Open Office suite.)

  • Time Machine Backup from Snow leopard

    My old Macbook died. It was rurning Snow Leopard, and fortunately i had everything backed up with time machine on an iomega network drive. I just bought a new Macbook pro with Mountain Lion and i get an error when i try to access the time machine backup: "The version of the server you are trying to connect to is not supported. Please contact your system administrator to resolve the problem."
    Any ideas?
    Thank you

    See Pondini's Excellent information here...
    Setting-up a new Mac from an old one, its backups, or a PC
    But am not sure about TM and your iomega network drive
    More Info here...
    http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.htm

  • Can I restore my system after replacing my hard drive with the original leopard discs, then use my time machine backup (with Snow Leopard) to finish the restore?

    I am replacing my original 100gb hard drive for a 500gb.  I am currently running OS X.6.7.  I understand the process of how to install the new drive and restore the system from the disc.  What I am unsure of is whether I need the Snow Leopard disc or can I use the original Leopard discs and then plug in my time machine backup to complete the restore?

    How do I restore my entire system?.
    or, use Carbon Copy Cloner to clone your current system to an external HD, replace the HD, then clone the clone back to the new drive.

  • How do I reinstall Lion after having to revert to previous Time Machine Backup of Snow Leopard?

    After upgrading to Lion, had to revert to a Snow Leopard Time Machine backup in order to transition my Quicken data to a newer version of Quicken compatible with Lion.  Now not sure how to get back my upgrade.  Command-R during restart does not work, I'm sure because system is now running Snow Leopard.  App Store does not show my purchase.  Don't want to pay for Lion again.  Don't want to restore Lion Time Machine Backup as I will lose my new Quicken Essentials version and data file.

    If you are running Snow Leopard 10.6.6 or later open App Store and sign in with the same Apple ID you used to purchase Lion. Click on Purchases icon  in the toolbar. You should see an active Install button to the right of your original Lion purchase entry.

  • Migration Assistant in Lion won't recognize Time Machine backup from Snow Leopard

    I just got an iMac with Lion. I am trying to use the Migration Assistant to move my files/apps etc from a Time Machine backup to the new computer.  The MA will not recognize the backup drive - (external firewire 800).  I can see the backup drive on my desktop but it does not show up as an option to choose in the Migration Assistant.  Any idea what might be wrong.  The backup is from an iMac running Snow Leopard and all the system software was last updated on Dec 9th. It think it is as current as I could get with Snow Leopard. Any ideas what is wrong? 
    Thanks,
    Chad

    This happened to me after hard drive replacement under the Seagate Drive Recall at the local Apple Store. Here's what I learned from the process:
    I Wagged the Mac home, fired it up (with naked OS installed at the Apple Store), and it wouldn't see my Time Machine drive with Setup Assistant - not on firewire 800 nor USB. Just a grey spinner that lasts forever. When I try just continuing anyway, it offers me something that looks plausible, but then puts up a dialog about duplicate user name, and no matter what I enter, it always says "that user already exists". So I think - maybe Migration Assistant. Complete the setup, create an account, watch the nice welcome movie. BAM - there's my Time Machine drive on the desktop. OK - it has to work . . . but no. Same behavior in Migration Assistant, plus the new OS offers to start making backups on my Time Machine disk - it's not recognizing it at all.
    So - back to the Apple Store - let the genius figure it out. It turns out there are multiple problems. First, the "genius" who imaged my new machine picked 10.7.2 but my machine had 10.7.5 - turns out, it's not enough just to have right cat. Even a point release older OS may not recognize a newer Time Machine drive. The guy at the desk said "We have images of everything but the 10.7.2 has free iLife in it, so they like to use that one". What the heck? They don't image what you had originally as a matter of sane process?
    Having figured that out, we re-image 10.7.5 at the store thinking we've fixed it. But no - Setup Assistant still won't see the Time Machine drive. Not on USB, not on Firewire. Not in a box, not with a fox.
    So here's the second trick - newer machines have a recovery partion. see: http://www.apple.com/osx/recovery/  Boot with the option key held down, pick that partition, then you'll get a "system restore" option, to restore your whole system from a Time Machine backup. My drive was recognized by the recovery partition restore process when neither Setup nor Migration Assistant would. Obviously, there's something broken in Setup/Migration Assistant.
    Takeaway:
    - if you're getting a drive replaced by Apple, make sure they image *exactly* the same OS
    - if Setup Assistant fails, use the recovery partition for system restore
    - Use Recovery Disk Assistant http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1433 NOW to make yourself a recovery thumb drive just in case. With Apple's new "no media" approach to the OS, you're hosed without it.

  • Using Leopard Time Machine Backup after snow leopard install

    So I want to install Snow Leopard (and set up bootcamp), and I wanted to wipe my hard drive and do a clean install - because in the past i've had some trouble creating a bootcamp partition.
    would i be able to wipe and install snow leopard, and then easily restore my data and settings from a time machine backup?

    You may get a better response if you posted your question
    in the Snow Leopard forum...
    http://discussions.apple.com/category.jspa?categoryID=263
    Dave

  • Can I Install My ML Time Machine Backup on Snow Leopard?

    I have a Time Machine backup with Mountain Lion on it.  Can I install this straight onto a Mac with Snow Leopard on it?  If so, does it install the hidden Lion Boot Partition as well?

    No.

  • Keep last Time Machine backup from Snow Leopard

    Recently my 2008 Macbook (aluminum) was running much slower so I performed a backup in Time Machine on my external HD, erased my MacBook's HD and performed a clean install of Mountain Lion.  I do not need all of the files from my Time Machine backup so instead of restoring from that backup I manually transferred only the important documents (mostly because I did not want old software, etc.).  I reinstalled my software from disks or re-downloaded and am happy that this machine is performing beautifully.  I would like to save *ONLY* the last TM backup I made before wiping my HD as a file on the HD and then erase the external so I can set up TM to do backups on the computer again (Ideally, would partition external to contain the last backup of the "old machine" but need to know size of that file to do so.).  However because of the weirdness with how TM writes files I am not sure which files must be saved for this to work.  Do I just save the file linked in the "Latest backup" alias, and if not what other files need to be saved?  Is it even possible to do this? 

    See Pondini's Excellent information here...
    Setting-up a new Mac from an old one, its backups, or a PC
    But am not sure about TM and your iomega network drive
    More Info here...
    http://pondini.org/TM/Troubleshooting.htm

  • How, specifically, do I restore Time Machine backup of Snow Leopard after upgrading to Lion?

    I upgraded to Lion and cannot access my Quicken files. I understand that I have to go back to Snow Leopard to export the Quicken files, but I don't see how to restore Snow Leopard from Time Machine. Or, how to boot up directly to the external drive, which was also suggested as a solution.

    Stanley Horwitz wrote:
    Reinstall Snow Leopard from the original media,
    You don't need to do that;  just start up from the Snow Leopard Install disc and do a full restore from your last Snow Leopard backup, per the link posted by OGLETHORPE.

  • I have a mid 2010 Macbook Pro running Snow Leopard and foolishly upgraded to Yosemite.  Is it possible to go back in time with Time Machine and reinstall Snow Leopard.  Then upgrade to Lion or Mavericks?  Any other ideas on how I can exit Yosemite?

    I have a mid 2010 Macbook Pro running Snow Leopard and foolishly upgraded to Yosemite. Now have numerous problems.  Is it possible to go back in time with Time Machine and reinstall Snow Leopard?  Then upgrade to Lion or Mavericks?  Any other ideas on how I can exit Yosemite?

    Once you get yourself back to Snow Leopard, if you still want to upgrade somewhat, I would suggest the following:
    1. Get an external hard drive that you can use for experiments with new OS versions. You could partition it into 2 or 3 partitions. You could then clone your existing Snow Leopard system to one partition using Carbon Copy Cloner (well worth $40) or SuperDuper ($25).
    2. Buy OS X Mountain Lion for $20, through the Apple online store (I don't think it's available through the App Store). Apple has decided to make it very difficult for anyone to get Mavericks unless they have already downloaded it.
    You will receive two e-mails from Apple, one containing a PDF with a redemption code, and one with the password you will need to unlock the PDF. Using the code, you will download Mountain Lion from the App Store, where it will appear among your Purchased items.
    After ML finishes downloading, its installer app will launch itself. When you see this launch screen, QUIT the install app immediately! Go to your applications folder, find the Install OS X Mountain Lion app, and copy it to a safe location outside of your Applications folder. Keeping one or more copies will allow you to reinstall without unnecessary aggravation if you later need or want to do that. At this point, you can re-launch the Installer in the Applications folder and let it run. You can install it on a clean partition on your external HD, or you can allow it to upgrade the Snow Leopard clone you created on your external drive, or you can do both. This should allow you to test how everything works for as long as you like.
    3. If you left yourself a free partition on your test drive, try a clean install of Yosemite and set everything up from scratch (do not migrate anything). This will allow you to see whether your problems with it were related to something in your Snow Leopard system.

  • Can i do a time machine back to snow leopard from Lion?

    After hearing lots of good and bad about Lion, i've re-considered paying the 29 and doing an upgrade. Mostly because of the full screen two finger swipe feature. 
    would you agree that feature alone is worth the upgrade?
    if i didn't like it, could i do a time machine back to snow leopard no problem? I don't have any installation discs.
    Thanks for your feedback.

    Lion has lots of good features, but the trouble is it has lost nice features too. You can ONLY tell what you think after a week or so of use.
    "Going Back To Snow Leopard" is a LOT of work - you will have to use the DVD install disk that came with your computer to erase Lion and install SL from scratch. That means saving your valuables in SL first (Time Machine or some other external drive export like Carbon Copy Cloner). It takes hours of your day, but can be done.
    Lion needs a lot of care (adjustments) to make it behave the way you like it - it is REALLY different at first, but there are ways to make it behave a LOT more like SL by tweaking options in System Preferences and so on. It also takes hours to index - leave your machine on for 24 hours after you first install Lion - it will speed up a lot quicker that way.

  • Backup system to Time Machine then Install Snow Leopard

    I tried upgrading to 10.4.8 but snow leopard wouldn't install as it said "Time Machine" installed on drive. I checked preferences in "Time Machine" and it is set to backup to an external "G" drive, not my Mac HD. What gives?
    I'm willing to backup everything to "Time Machine" then format the hard disk and do a completely "clean" installation of "Snow Leopard". I'm just scared I won't be able to put everything back on Snow like I had it on the old OS X. Can someone tell me how to upgrade above or how to restore my "Time Machine" backup after I do a new install.
    Many thanks in advance.
    Jim

    junroe wrote:
    I tried upgrading to 10.4.8 but snow leopard wouldn't install as it said "Time Machine" installed on drive. I checked preferences in "Time Machine" and it is set to backup to an external "G" drive, not my Mac HD. What gives?
    Most likely, there's a Backups.backupdb folder at the top level of your HD. Hopefully, it's empty. If so, just delete it. If not, see how big it is and post back.
    . . . then format the hard disk and do a completely "clean" installation of "Snow Leopard".
    Why do you want to erase and reinstall everything? That's almost never required, or even helpful, on a Mac.
    All you have to do is insert the SL disc and follow the instructions. It will install itself and delete Leopard, without touching your data. Takes about 45 minutes or so.

  • 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.

  • Struggling to restore from Time Machine (2007 MacBook; Snow Leopard)

    The hard drive failed on my 2007 MacBook. I had it replaced and the shop also installed Snow Leopard (this was what  I was using prior to the fail).
    I tried a restore from Time Machine and while a huge chunk of my new hard drive disappeared,  I couldn't locate the files. I have since found them in the hidden /Volumes folder.
    I have also learned that to do a full restore,  I should have used my Snow Leopard install disk alongside the drive with Time Machine backups.
    So...
    1. Should I delete the restored file in the /Volumes folder and start again using the Snow Leopard install disk?
    2. I want to upgrade to Lion (this is the furthest I can go with this MacBook). Can  I do step 1 using a Lion install disk even though the Time Machine backup was created in Snow Leopard? (Confession: I'm not sure where my Snow Leopard disk is and I'm trying to avoid going through cupboards and boxes to find it)
    3. is it laborious and risky to try to restore everything manually from the /Volumes folder? Where do  I start if I decide on this route?
    Thanks in advance for any advice.

    I would try recovering the files manually first. If the result is unsatisfactory, then I'd boot up using the Snow Leopard DVD, run Disk Utility/Repair disk, erase and reformat the drive, and then install Snow Leopard. Reboot normally, and use Setup Assistant to restore from Time Machine. Completely update to 10.6.8 and then consider if you want to upgrade to Lion. There are no Lion disks - it is a download.
    10.6.8 Combo Updater

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