Update from tiger 10.4.11 to snow leoprad

I need to update my macbook to snow leopard system
Can i do this?

Yes, if it's actually a MacBook(not an iBook or PowerBook) and has at least 1GB of RAM. Click here and buy the DVD.
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Similar Messages

  • Updating from Tiger to Snow Leopard without buying the Mac Box Set

    Is it possible to update from Tiger to Snow Leopard without buying the Mac Box Set? My sister already has iLife 09 so I could borrow it and simply buy Snow Leopard. Is that possible or would it still violate the licensing agreement?

    R C-R:
    Barry Hemphill wrote:
    You will note that Apple says that the upgrade is for OS X 10.5 users.
    Note that this does not say Snow Leopard is not an upgrade for 10.4 users.
    Did you read item C from the license link you posted (underline was added for emphasis)?
    Leopard Upgrade Licenses. If you have purchased an Upgrade for Mac OS X Leopard license, then subject to the terms and conditions of this License, you are granted a limited non-exclusive license to install, use and run one (1) copy of the Apple Software on a single Apple-branded computer _as long as that computer has a properly licensed copy of Mac OS X Leopard already installed on it._ If you have purchased a Family Pack Upgrade for Mac OS X Leopard license, then subject to the terms and conditions of this License, you are granted a limited non-exclusive license to install, use and run one (1) copy of the Apple Software on up to a maximum of five (5) Apple-branded computers at a time as long as those computers are located in the same household (as defined above), are used by persons who occupy that same household, and each such computer has a properly licensed copy of Mac OS X Leopard already installed on it. The Family Pack Upgrade for Mac OS X Leopard License does not extend to business or commercial users.
    The OP asked about using the upgrade (and, obviously, try to avoid buying the box set) to move from OS X 10.4 to OS X 10.6. I mentioned the license agreement to allow the OP to make their own decision.
    Barry

  • Will upgrading from Tiger 10.4.11 to Snow Leopard delete programs?

    Sorry if this is a stupid question or answered a million times before, but will upgrading from Tiger 10.4.11 to Snow Leopard stop my existing programs (PhotoShop, Office etc) from running? I've got an Intel MacBook but I've never installed a new OS myself, so any tips gratefully received! Thank you.

    You will lose the ability to work in any Classic OS applications that ran under system 9.
    If I were you, before upgrading do yourself a favor and purchase an external hard drive that you can "clone" your Mac to. If possible, a large enough drive that you can have 2 partitions. In one you would clone your current system and apps. Then after the upgrade, clone again your updated system to the other partition as a emergency backup.
    With the clone of your current set up, if need be you can rebbot to it so that you can use any of your "old" applications.

  • Anybody have problems updating from Leopard 10.5.8 to Snow Leopard 10.6.3, or can I expect an easy update?

    Anybody have problems updating from Leopard 10.5.8 to Snow Leopard 10.6.3, or can I expect an easy update?

    rrk224 wrote:
    Anybody have problems updating from Leopard 10.5.8 to Snow Leopard 10.6.3, or can I expect an easy update?
    You shouldn't have too much trouble provided you have a relatively clean system.
    You should backup your personal users folders off the machine to a regular storage drive (not TimeMachine) and disconnect.
    10.6 upgrade strips out the 10.5 PPC code your not using and offers faster video drivers and some neat features like Exposé and Spaces which is highly productive as you can have 4-16 desktops visible at once and move stuff around between them (10.7 ripped that out)
    10.6 is the fastest OS X version Apple has made, 10.5 is universal (more code and older video drivers) and 10.7 is slower than 10.6 in tests on the same hardware.
    Your 10.5 install disk should be working, (check it first) stick it in and reboot holding the c key down, you should be able to boot from the disk. Apple isn't offering replacement 10.5 disks anymore so it needs to work in case you want to downgrade from 10.6.
    You can learn how to make copies of your 10.5 disk online. I would do so.
    You might decide to Carbon Copy Cloner (free/donations) your present 10.5 system to a blank external powered drive, you then can hold the option key and boot from it, erase and reverse clone back to your internal drive if you wish.
    10.6 will run all your 10.5 software (some may need a update) as it has Rosetta, a compatibility system for 10.5 code. 10.7 does not, it will not run your present Rosetta/10.5 software at all, you will have to buy all new versions. Also older hardware likely won't work neither, like printers, scanners and all-in-ones etc as their drivers either won't get a update or they won't make one to force a premature hardware turnover.
    If your upgrading your older 10.5 machine to 10.7, I'd advise against it, there isn't as much software ready for 10.7 (like 10.6) because it's forcing developers to rewrite their PPC based code
    10.7 is slower and more glitchs than 10.6, more depressing gray all over and strange UI changes.
    Also 10.8 is due out this summer and may not run on older hardware, so it's looking like you will be best off with 10.6.8 and leaving it at that to get the most software choice/performance and leave 10.8 for a new hardware/software purchase.
    If your going to 10.7 anyway, then check this database to make sure the software your going to have to buy is ready or not. IMO, Lion for you and your older machine is a wasted effort and better the new software on a new hardware purchase.
    http://roaringapps.com/apps:table
    I must admit though I throughly hate OS X Lion, as do a lot of other people,  it's only because it's quality is absolutely terrible and unbecoming of Apple, likely why Mountain Lion 10.8 is being released this summer a year in advance and only a year after Lion. However my opinion about Lion's poor quality isn't relfected in my advice to you. For you it's more of a older hardware/have to buy all new software type deal which a newer machine with 10.8 and promises to be better/more refined OS than 10.7.
    So in other words, upgrade to 10.6.8 and stay there, save your pennies for a new machine Early 2013, by then 10.8 would have several months and a lot of software/bugs worked out for it.

  • Will an upgrade from Tiger 10.4.11 to Snow Leopard make me loose programs?

    I have an old 2007 Macbook pro and I need to upgrade from Tiger OS 10.4.11 to either leopard of Snow leopard because my charger broke and the new charger does not work probably in the older laptops unless you firmare update (which I cannot do as my OS is less than 10.5)
    My question is: Will upgrading wipe all the files and programs from my laptop? I have programs that I no longer have the discs, to install them with, for so if they get wiped I will be unable to get them back and they are programs I need on a daily basis. I was just wondering what upgrading from tiger to leopard will actually involve? Will I loose all files/programs so it would be like starting from scratch with a new computer? Or would it not change these things?

    Buy an external drive (or two).
    Clone your system before you begin.
    Repair the drive while at it, Apple First Aid and another 3rd party program.
    Make sure you can boot from your backup clone.
    Apple Restore is part of Disk Utilty or there is SuperDuper, or Carbon Copy Cloner.
    Me, I would take the above precautions. Then I would format your drive with SL DVD, and perform and clean install. Do all the updates. Then use Setup or Migration Assistant.
    Look for threads, there seems to be 4-5 a week at least on Migrating, going from 10.4 or from PPC to 10.6.
    That is the safest. In theory, and YMMV, you could try upgrade in place, but not without backups, and repairing your drive with SL DVD first.

  • Upgrading from tiger (10.4.11) to snow leopard 10.6

    Is buying the box set a MUST to upgrade from tiger to snow leopard?? I just need the update to run a piece of hardware. I don't WANT all that other stuff.

    adrisen wrote:
    It does not make a difference where the family pack came from when the owner only has one computer, and they are part of my family.
    First you said you had a friend who had the "multi family pack," now you imply this is a family member, so which is it?
    Regardless, what matters is that only persons located in *the same household* can use the same Family Pack license. This is clearly stated at the Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard - Family Pack - Apple Store (U.S.) web page & in the Snow Leopard EULA pdf. From the store page:
    *About the Family Pack*
    The Family Pack Software License Agreement allows you to install and use one copy of the Apple software on up to a maximum of five (5) Apple-labeled computers at a time as long as those computers are located in the same household and used by persons who occupy that household. By “household” we mean a person or persons who share the same housing unit such as a home, apartment, mobile home, or condominium, including students who are primary residents of that household but reside at a separate on-campus location. This license does not extend to business or commercial users.
    And this information now has also has some form the gentlemen that I am now dealing with to know repair the computer and put is back to a working order.
    I'm sorry but I don't know what this sentence means or how it is supposed to relate to this topic. No Apple tech is going to tell you that you must upgrade to a different version of Snow Leopard to fix anything if you have a legitimately licensed retail copy of that OS -- there is just the one version suitable for those upgrading from Tiger, sold with one of two licenses.

  • Upgrade from tiger 10.4.11 to snow leopard

    To upgrade my Imac Tiger 10.4.11 to Snow Leopard 10.6, must I purchase the Snow Leopard upgrade or the full version of Snow Leopard?  Thank you

    Start by checking if you can run Snow Leopard:
    Requirements for OS X 10.6 'Snow Leopard'
    http://support.apple.com/kb/SP575
    The OS 10.6 Snow Leopard install DVD is available for $19.99 from the Apple Store:
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC573/mac-os-x-106-snow-leopard
    and in the UK:
    http://store.apple.com/uk/product/MC573/mac-os-x-106-snow-leopard
    When you have installed it, run Software Update to download and install the latest updates for Snow Leopard to bring it up to 10.6.8, or download the combo update from here:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1399
    Check via Software Update whether any further updates are required, particularly to iTunes.

  • Upgrade from Tiger (g4 ibook) to leopard/ snow leopard? Please help!

    I know a fairly knowledgeable when it comes to the lovely apple mac, but i am getting a little lost in a load of jargon on forums about whether you can update the software on a G4 ibook from Tiger (10.4.11) to something more recent (leopard/snow) which supports iLife '09.
    The ibook G4 is an old laptop and I also have a Macbook which I leave at the office which runs off leopard. Can I t-boot and upgrade my software on my old G4?
    If so, step by step dummy instructions would be soooo fantastic, if anyone would be kind enough to break it down for me
    hope someone can help

    So when you say "verify" what are you referring to?
    "Try Disk Utility
    1. Insert the Mac OS X Install disc, then restart the computer while holding the C key.
    2. When your computer finishes starting up from the disc, choose Disk Utility from the Installer menu. (In Mac OS X 10.4 or later, you must select your language first.)
    *Important: Do not click Continue in the first screen of the Installer. If you do, you must restart from the disc again to access Disk Utility.*
    3. Click the First Aid tab.
    4. Select your Mac OS X volume.
    5. Click Repair. Disk Utility checks and repairs the disk."
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=106214
    There's also a Verify button there, but may as well Repair, which verifies also.
    Do you have a referral for obtaining new disc at reasonable price for this procedure or what I should expect to pay? Or just hunt?
    If apple still has it, $129, if hunting, make sure it's not a Gray machine specific Disc, which are all Intel only also.
    If Apple, you have to call Apple & likely ask for a Product Specialist to get it, if they still have it!

  • Will update from Tiger affect Automatic Software Update?

    Hi guys.
    It's my first question here. I purchased a MacBook approx 3 years ago from Apple Store which got Tiger(10.4.11) installed.
    I would like to update to Snow Leopard because I need to upgrade from Adobe CS3 to CS5. My question is if I buy the Snow Leopard disc from Apple Store and upgrade from Tiger will automatic software update and other stuff work?
    Appreciate your help.

    Chubbs75 wrote:
    My question is if I buy the Snow Leopard disc from Apple Store and upgrade from Tiger will automatic software update and other stuff work?
    If you are asking if Software Update will automatically update Snow Leopard & other Apple-supplied software to the latest versions during or immediately after the upgrade, the answer is no. The upgrade should preserve whatever preferences you set for Software Update in Tiger, so depending on them you may see no automatic update notifications, notifications only after the interval for checks you have set has elapsed, or whatever.
    Remember that it is highly recommended that you backup your HD, or at least your important data, before applying any upgrade or update. If you do that, you may want to run Software Update as soon as you verify that the upgrade went as expected, & let it recommend & install all the updates your system needs to bring it up to date.

  • Can't find mails anymore after update from Tiger to Leopard

    I've just updated my IMac from Tiger to Leopard (OSX 10.5.6).
    After opening the Mail program I just see the menu bar (no window for the postbox).
    When I open the postbox via the menu bar, the box is just empty. Are my mails gone? Where can I find or restore them?
    Thanks for help,
    Vanillia

    Let's force an overall reindexing via the removal of the Envelope Index. Note the special instructions when forcing the reindexing of IMAP or Exchange accounts in the following:
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?path=Mail/3.0/en/14019.html
    This will force the reindexing of all the POP mailboxes and all On My Mac mailboxes. With regard to any IMAP accounts if you have any, the practical result of this action of removing the account folder, is that with the IMAP account still set up in the Preferences, Mail will connect to the IMAP server and create a new account folder, and while doing so will index the messages in the mailbox folders of the IMAP accounts on the server.
    Keep me posted.
    Ernie

  • Up Grade from Tiger 10.4.11 to Snow Leopard (Box Set)

    I have a two part Question:
    Do I have to do a full install or can I perform a partial install and not to up grade to snow leopard using the Box Set. I read stories the snow Leopard up grade is having issues with certain older programs (i.e. Photo shop, Word etc...) Is this true?
    I assume the best method to install would be a Clean and Install or is there another way that it's done? The reason I need to up grade is because of my new modem -Airport Extreme, which requires Leopard.
    Thank for your insight..
    Brad

    [Here is a thread describing a successful upgrade install from Tiger to Sno.|http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2185421&tstart=125] And, here are my thoughts about moving from Tiger to Sno. I recommend that you use the upgrade method if your Tiger install is a very good one. Otherwise, I would do an erase and install. The backup process I would use in either case is described below.
    Your Mac must meet [these general requirements|http://www.apple.com/macosx/specs.html]. I would not upgrade to SL unless I had an external drive with a bootable clone of my internal-drive boot volume on it. I think that there is enough risk upgrading to SL that such conservatism is warranted. I would not use time machine for an installation backup; I don't trust it enough. If you do not like SL, then you can restore your internal using the clone. In doing an upgrade install, the clone is your data backup and fail-safe device. You can clone with Disk Utility, SuperDuper, or Carbon Copy Cloner. If you do an erase and install, then the clone also is your migration medium.
    An upgrade install is performed by installing over your existing installation from the desktop or having started from your SL DVD. Doing so requires you to have a GUID partition. To proceed, start the installer, choose your language, start Disk Utility, make sure your partition is GUID, quit disk utility if it is and continue your installation. All your data, users settings, and apps will be present after your upgrade, except that incompatible programs will be archived in the Incompatible Software folder. It the partition is not GUID, then you will have to do an erase and install.
    If you do an erase and install, then make sure your partition is GUID as described above. After you install, then you will be able to use set up assistant to migrate you data, apps, users, and settings to your new SL install. Also, if you have to make your partition GUID, then your drive will automatically be erased Mac extended (journaled). Finally, post back if you choose to do an erase and install. I have more info to provide.
    You probably will want to install at least two of the optional install items on your Sno DVD, Rosetta and QT7. You can install either from the Optional Install Items folder on your on SL install DVD.
    Leave your Ethernet cable, if any, in place when installing, but unplug all peripherals except those needed to install.

  • Can I update from osx 10.4.11 to snow leopard?

    I have a mac book pro with OSX 10.4.11 and would like to upgrade it to OSX Snow Leopard.  Can I simply proceed or is there an in between update necessary?  Thanks.
    Mbota2

    Purchase a Snow Leopard DVD with which you can upgrade your current system.  Before upgrading do the following:
    Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions
    Boot from your Snow Leopard Installer disc. 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 your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list.  In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive.  If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer.
    If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior and/or Tech Tool Pro to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X.
    If all is OK then continue with the installation of Snow Leopard.

  • Somehow, after updating from Tiger to Leopard, I've managed to lose my Stickies application from the dock.

    I upgraded my non-intel Powerbook G4 from Tiger to Leopard and then to 10.5.8.  While reinstalling my files, I dragged the 10.4.11 Stickies app onto the desktop from my backup.  Somehow, I got confused when the computer asked if I wanted to replace the old version with the newer version.  I think the computer saw the dragged old applicaton as the new one that came in Leopard.  Obviously I made the wrong choice and lost the Leopard Stickies.  They came off of the dock and also are not located in Applications on the HD.  The old copy from the Tiger backup can't be opened. 
    How can I get the Leopard Stickies back??  All I can think is to reload Leopard and I can't face that right now.  Any ideas as to how to get them back relatively painlessly?

    Search these discussions for "pacifist" and you should find a link to a utility that will allow you to extract the application from the installer.

  • Updated From Tiger to snow leopard

    Hi all. Wondering if anyone can walk me through the process of upgrading my 10.4 to 10.6. i ordered an external hard drive (IOMEGA MINIMAX 2TB) to back up my current files and bought the newest box set (ilife 11). I haven't used any kind of back up system prior to this so I don't want to lose anything in the process of upgrading. I guess I could use help with all of it.
    1. backing up my current files
    2. upgrading to 10.6
    Anyone up for the task? Thanks in advance.

    Hi Robert,
    Backing up first is a --good--- great idea.
    Get carbon copy cloner to make an exact copy of your old HD to the New one...
    http://www.bombich.com/software/ccc.html
    Or SuperDuper...
    http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/
    That should put us on safe footing, just boot from the external drive to test it out for being complete first.
    The default install of 10.6.x is to do what used to be called an Archive and Install feature, which can give you a new OS, yet preserve your files and settings if you have enough room on your HD...
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=107120
    No worry there.
    On iLife 11, there have been some problems if you have a lot of previous iLife App's data. Will wait to here on that from you, but hold off installing that part for right now.

  • Unable to install snow leopard  (update from Tiger)

    Yeah, I know, it's not exactly an original thread title. I'm running 10.4.11 on a Macbook. As far as I know I meet all the requirements except that I don't think I'll be able to benefit from OpenCL. Anyway, I got the yellow caution icon and a message saying I need to run disk utility and do a GUID partition but I'll lose all data. I don't have a backup so that's not a good option for me. I thought I saw a thread somewhere describing this problem at one of the other Mac sites but I can't seem to find it. Can anyone assist?
    Message was edited by: Victor Foster

    Not my intention to start so much consternation. I was just venting my disappointment. Actually, If I were to back up everything, I'd need at least 100 gigs of space, which leaves me 60 gigs. That might be a bit much for DVDs, etc. No worries. It may take me a month or two but I'll eventually get an external drive. That's been on my list of need to do for far too long anyway. I know how it is to lose everything as that happened to me not long ago. If I were to be selective, I could probably get away with just backing up about 60 gigs. but the conventional wisdom seems to be you need at least one half more space than what you back up, right? So I need a 200-250 gig external drive, I think. I also need a backup scenario for my Linux and Windows boxes but I want to start with the Mac since it's my primary machine. I'm just frustrated I've been unemployed so long but I'm not alone in that I'm sure, Well I guess that's it for now.
    Message was edited by: Victor Foster

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