Upgrade Snow Leopard to Lion in Canada

Hi There!  I would like to upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion.  My iMac is too old to go to Mountain Lion or Mavericks, but although it's obviously obsolete, I would like to have my computer running the latest software it can...  I found a link that took me to a place in the US Apple Store to download a code to get Lion, but it didn't like my Canadian address.  Is there a way to get to do this from Canada?  Thanks!!
Branden

Upgrading to Lion
If your computer does not meet the requirements to install Mavericks, it may still meet the requirements to install Lion.
You can purchase Lion by contacting Customer Service: Contacting Apple for support and service - this includes international calling numbers. The cost is $19.99 (as it was before) plus tax.  It's a download. You will get an email containing a redemption code that you then use at the Mac App Store to download Lion. Save a copy of that installer to your Downloads folder because the installer deletes itself at the end of the installation.
     Lion System Requirements
       1. Mac computer with an Intel Core 2 Duo, Core i3, Core i5, Core i7,
           or Xeon processor
       2. 2GB of memory
       3. OS X v10.6.6 or later (v10.6.8 recommended)
       4. 7GB of available space
       5. Some features require an Apple ID; terms apply.
From the list click on the Canadian support site.

Similar Messages

  • How do I upgrade Snow Leopard to Lion? I have installedOS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1

    How do I upgrade Snow Leopard to Lion? I have installed OS X 10.6.8 Update Combo v1.1
    I have another machine that already has Lion on it and I want them both to have the same OS version. 

    Not the iTunes App Store, but under the Apple
    icon at top left>Appstore, likely only 10.8/Mountain Lion will be found, if you don't want that & want Lion, you have to call Apple & get a key for Lion download.
    Call Apple Sales...in the US: 1-800-MY-APPLE. Or Support... 1-800-275-2273
    Other countries...
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HE57
    Do make a copy of the Installer before running it, like baltwo points out.

  • If i upgrade  Snow Leopard  to lion, all information will be removed? from hard disk ?, if i upgrade  Snow Leopard  to lion, all informatio will be removed from hard disk ?

    if i upgrade  Snow Leopard  to lion, all information will be removed? from hard disk ?, if i upgrade  Snow Leopard  to lion, all informatio will be removed from hard disk ?

    John Hammer said it best -- backup first and always. That's why Time Machine and periodic clones of your boot drive to an external disk are so valuable.
    That said – the Lion upgrade will retain all user data, files, settings, mail, and preferences. Mind you that a few settings and their location have changed.
    Before you actually use Lion, may I recommend spending the first evening looking at every single preference panel in System Preferences.  Many of the user interface choices can be reverted back to mimic Snow Leopard if you choose.
    Relax and enjoy Lion – it is amazing.  Please holler if we can help further.

  • Can I upgrade Snow Leopard to Lion from a backup system?

    Hi,
    This is a bit of a roundabout question so let me establish what's going on:
    -I just got a new Mac Pro 6-core a few days ago, which arrived with Lion installed.
    -I backed up the fresh Lion system to an external drive and downgraded to Snow Leopard to retain compatibility with certain apps.
    -I imaginge somewhere down the line I will have to follow suit and upgrade to Lion/Mountain Lion, so....
    Is there ANY way I could use my backup of the fresh Lion system to upgrade my Snow Leopard (if need be) to prevent me having to purchase Lion to upgrade Snow Leopard instead?
    Thanks for your help!
    Andrew

    Is there ANY way I could use my backup of the fresh Lion system to upgrade my Snow Leopard (if need be) to prevent me having to purchase Lion to upgrade Snow Leopard instead?
    Aside from the fact that it will probably not work, the point is that your license for the preinstalled Lion is only good for one machine. If you want it on any other machine, you will need to buy it. Why don't you just wait until you want to install Mountain Lion - if the terms are the same as they were for Lion,  it'll cost you $20 to update all your machines.

  • ADVANTAGES FOR UPGRADING SNOW LEOPARD MOUNTAIN LION

    I have a late 2010 Mac book Pro 13"  2.26 GHz  4 GB and I upgraded to Lion when it came out but I reverted back to Snow Leopard, my main use for my Mac is music I'm using Native Instruments Traktor Pro 2 software with the Traktor S4 controller hardware to continue upgrading my Traktor software I need upgrade to Mountain Lion, the Traktor software upgrades are not critical right now. Will there be problems skipping the Lion upgrade, I'm debating if there's any value to upgrade when everything is working fine. There seems to be a divided consensus for the Mountain Lion upgrade.    

    A simple suggestion, get yourself an external Firewire
    HD (USB will be to slow), clone your current SL installation
    to it, spend the $19.99 and install on that drive.  Use it
    for a while and if you are happy, clone the install back to
    the internal drive.  If not happy, wipe the external drive
    and you have an additional backup or data drive (can never
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  • Upgrade Snow Leopard Mountain Lion, lose iPhoto?

    hi People
    I recently had to wipe off my Macbook and do a clean install of Mountain Lion.  Noticed that it no longer comes with iPhoto.
    If I upgrade my iMac from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion, will I lose my iPhoto (and garage band, iLife stuff etc)??
    thanks

    Inscapes wrote:
    I recently had to wipe off my Macbook and do a clean install of Mountain Lion.  Noticed that it no longer comes with iPhoto.
    Restoring your Free iLife (iPhoto, iMovie etc)
    If I upgrade my iMac from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion, will I lose my iPhoto (and garage band, iLife stuff etc)??
    Not if you upgrade alone, if you wipe and install/upgrade then yes.

  • Upgraded Snow Leopard to Lion, iTunes downgraded to 10.3.1.

    I installed Lion today over Snow Leopard, and now when I try to start up iTunes I get this error message:
    The file “iTunes Library.itl” cannot be read because it was created by a newer version of iTunes. Would you like to download iTunes now?
    I click on Download iTunes, and Software Update starts up and tells me that all the software is up to date.
    iTunes in the Applications folder is at version 10.3.1. Before the upgrade to Lion it was 10.5.3.
    Time Machine can't restore the newer version of iTunes because "“iTunes” can’t be modified or deleted because it’s required by Mac OS X."

    The current version of iTunes is 10.6.3, not 10.5.3.
    You can download it from Apple's web site: http://support.apple.com/kb/DL1426
    The latest version of Lion is 10.7.4.
    Update your information, you list 10.6.2 as your current OSX version.

  • Upgrade snow leopard to lion please

    Someone PLEASE HELP!!!
    Just bought a used macbook. Just gone to upgrade to Mountain lion and it seems my machine wont run it despite being on Snow Leopard 10.6.8.
    I need Icloud and facetime so the best I can do is upgrade to Lion 10.7.
    But can I find how or where to do it?
    Anyone??

    Mountain Lion needs specific 64bit processors with NX capabilities, these are only found in Macs post 2008 and rarely before -  .
    Intel 64 alone does not help - in Lion this was enough  : any Intel Core2Duo - . Also 2GB of memory are needed and even if Lion needs only 1GB I recommend to max out the Ram for either of the Lion's.

  • How could i upgrade  snow leopard to lion

    Hi i just to know how could I upgrade the software Mac OS X v10.6 to  OX Mountain Lion 10.8

    Click here and order a download code for it.
    (126465)

  • Macbook 2006 upgrade to Leopard, Snow Leopard, or Lion?

    I own a white Macbook pro 2006 core 2 duo OS x 10.4 tiger. More than anything, I want to update this computer. Is there any possible way to upgrade to leopard, snow leopard, or lion?

    You can upgrade from 10.4 to10.6 with no problems. Any program that runs under 10.4 will run under 10.6. You might have to upgrade some drivers for printers, etc.... And you will have to install Rosetta if you have any Power PC applications http://www.macobserver.com/tmo/article/snow_leopard_installing_rosetta/   I recently upgraded an older Core Duo MacBook (1,1) from 10.4 to 10.6. If you only want iPhoto or other single apps from iLife '11 you can get them from the App Store after you've upgraded to 10.6.6. iPhoto, iMovie or Garage Bandfor $15 each and Pages, Keynote or Numbers from iWork '09 for $20 each.
    You can order a Snow Leopard10.6 install disk for $29 as long as you have at least1gb of RAM and 5gb offree space on your hard drive. http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC573Z/A?mco=MTY3ODQ5OTY
    A 10.5 Leopard disk willrun you over $100
    Once you are at 10.6.8 you can buy Lion from the App Store if you have at least a model 2,1 MacBook. Lion will require at least 2gb of RAM but really needs 4gb to run smoothly. Also Lion doesn't run any PowerPC programs. To see if you have any Power PC programs go to the Apple in the upper left corner and select About This Mac, then click on More Info. WhenSystem Profiler comes up select Applications under Software. Then look under kind to see if any of your applications are listed as Power PC. Universal and Intel will run under Lion.
    Before Mac switched to Intel processors they used Power PC processors from 1994 to 2005. Power PC 601 through 604, G3, G4 and G5. Applications written for the Power PC processors need an application called Rosetta to run on Intel processors. This was part of the Operating System in 10.4 and 10.5 but was an optional install in 10.6. With10.7 Lion Apple dropped support for Power PC applications.

  • Can not Upgrade Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion due to Bootcamp

    This is a long standing problem I had since I bought my Macbook Pro (a purchase now I deeply regret) almost two years ago.
    I keep asking around every few months, to see if anyone came up with a good solution. I hope someone can help me this time
    When I decided to buy my Macbook pro 10.6.8 with Snow Leopard, Apple said that the macbook would run smootly both in OSX and Windows due to bootcamp dual boot. I was quite happy about that,since my job requires me to use some Windows-only software and I was curious about apple products.
    Unfortunately, they fail to mention (or maybe they did not foresee) that upgrading anything on both OSX or Windows would have been a true nightmare. Right off the bat I spent countless hours trying to upgrade my graphic card drivers in Windows. More problems arrived every time a new software/upgrade/driver/OS update was coming up. The final blow was the release of OSX Lion.
    With a Bootcamp partition it is not possible to upgrade the OS from Snow Leopard to Lion or Mountain Lion. The reason is because a recovery system can't be created. The only solution I found so far would be:
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    3) Re-install OS leopard
    4) Upgrade to Mountain Lion
    5) Creat a bootcamp partition
    6) re-install Windows
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    8) Restore all data
    9) Wait for next OS release, DO IT AGAIN
    Forgive me , but this is absurd. I simply refuse of waste so much time and money
    Did anyone have the same problem and found a more cleaver way to solve it?
    Thanks!!!!

    This was solved some time ago. See the following:
    I saw a reference to an Apple bulletin on how to solve the problem if Lion rejects your install AND you have a BootCamp partition.
    It seems the issue is that the space at the "bottom" of your available space when Lion installs it's partition is already occupied by BootCamp. The fix was to go into Disk Utility; Select your Hard Drive; Select Partition; Move the bottom of your main partition "up" a bit to create a space for Lion; close Disk Utility; Install Lion; once Lion is successfully installed, go back into Disk Partition and drag the bottom of your main partition back "down" to the bottom of the window.
    You need to create a space about 2 GB in size.

  • System freezes when attempting to upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion

    I hope someone can help me out there.  I have downloaded the Lion upgrade install program and built an install disk on my jump drive using Lion Diskmaker 2.0.2, but when I tried to upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion using the jump drive, the install freezes at 24% and I cannot reboot or anything.  It just keeps coming back to the install screen.  Any suggestions?

    This could be due to a number of causes. If you have the Lion installer application, then I suggest you put it in your Downloads folder. Now do this:
    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.
    When you've done the above you should now double-click on the Lion installer application in your Applications folder. When prompted click on the Install button. Note that you will not use the flash drive you made as you shouldn't need it. And, this will avoid any issues with a bad flash drive installer.

  • Upgrade from snow leopard to lion 10.7.2

    Hi all,
    I wonder if anyone can help me at all. We currently have three MAC computers in our office, the newest one is running on version 10.6.8 and the other two are 10.5.8. I want to upgrade all of them to the new Lion 10.7.2 so we can have the new server and access all the features that goes with it. I understand that you cannot just do an upgrade from leopard to lion, you have to buy all of the upgrades. Is this correct? Also, do I need to buy all the upgrades for all of the MACS or can I just buy one version of each? Would it be a version of snow leopard, then Lion, the Lion 10.7.2 ?
    Hope this makes sense, any help would be much appreciated.
    Thanks again,
    Andrew

    argo10 wrote:
    We currently have three MAC computers in our office, the newest one is running on version 10.6.8 and the other two are 10.5.8. I want to upgrade all of them to the new Lion 10.7.2
    First off you should consider the risks of upgrading to 10.7
    1: 10.7 runs poorly or slowly on most older Intel hardware (certainly machines old encough to run 10.5 qualify)
    Lion has been tested and it's a hair slower than Snow Leopard.
    2: Lion machines also has to be 64 bit Intel processors, not the 32bit Intel Core Duo's. No PowerPC machines.
    3: 2GB of RAM is required, but people report 4GB is better.
    4: 10.7 will not run a LOT of your 10.5 and 10.6 software, and a lot haven't been upgraded/updated to work with 10.7. This also includes drivers for scanners and printers that some might be a bit older.
    You can check this compatibility database
    http://roaringapps.com/apps:table
    Snow Leopard runs everything from 10.5 and 10.6 because of Rosetta. So all your software should work, perhaps with a minor update each.
    5: OS Lion introduces some radical changes in the User Interface that can disrupt your workflow and sanity.
    My 20 plus Apple vet/production manager opinion is this, upgrade the 10.5 machines to 10.6.8 and leave things alone.
    When you buy new hardware, it will come with 10.7 and then you buy new software to go with it and gradually ease into it, sort of like getting a enema, insert gently.
    If you go all radical and change all the machines, your going to be in for quite a bit of pain, not only on the machines, but from the users using them, believe me!
    I understand that you cannot just do an upgrade from leopard to lion, you have to buy all of the upgrades. Is this correct? Also, do I need to buy all the upgrades for all of the MACS or can I just buy one version of each? Would it be a version of snow leopard, then Lion, the Lion 10.7.2 ?
    You can buy this ($69) and backup, wipe and install. Need one for each machine on 10.5. and you should have one for the 10.6 machine too, but you can download Lion $29 from the 10.6.8 AppStore instead, no USB copy.
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/MD256Z/A
    Snow Leopard $29 install/upgrade disks are here
    http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC573Z/A
    Again, I suggest you just upgrade the 10.5 Intel machines to 10.6, it's less expensive, it's stable and it works faster than 10.5 or 10.7 in tests.
    Save Lion for new hardware and software upgrades when they arrive.

  • Upgrade from Snow Leopard to Lion (mac)

    After a ugrade from Snow Leopard to Lion on my Imac, the software witch i have by mine E3000 router, works not longer anymore.
    What can i do?
    How can i chance something now??
    greets marijke

    Welcome to the Cisco Home Community.
    Check out this post from troia. 
    http://homecommunity.cisco.com/t5/Wireless-Hotspots/New-Lion-system-on-mac/m-p/417939/message-uid/41...
    The Search Function is your friend.... and Google too.
    How to Secure your Network
    How to Upgrade Routers Firmware
    Setting-Up a Router with DSL Internet Service
    Setting-Up a Router with Cable Internet Service
    How to Hard Reset or 30/30/30 your Router

  • I have a hdd from late 2009 that I upgraded from leopard to snow leopard to lion to mountain lion.  I want to upgrade the hdd to ssd.  Do I need to buy a new copy of mountain lion to install on the ssd?  If not, then what is the procedure to transfer?

    I have a hdd from a late 2009 mbp.  I upgraded from leopard to snow leopard to lion to mountain lion.  Now I want to upgrade to a ssd.  Do I need to purchase a new copy of mountain lion to go on my new ssd? If I don't, then what is the procedure to transfer mountain lion with my 4 user accounts onto the new ssd from the hdd?
    I'm confused on if I can use the recovery hd on a thumb drive to install mountain lion on my ssd.  Will it be pheasible with so many OS X upgrades?  And then how do I get my user accounts onto the ssd from the hdd.  Do I use migration assistant?  Do I need to make a time machine backup first?  Should I use something called Carbon Clone or something like that?
    Thanks for reading

    If you have a cable that connects and external HDD to the MBP, it will do.  If it is something like this, an  enclosure will not be needed for the swap:
    An enclosure allows you to use your old HDD for storage or backup purposes.  The cable will not. 
    Here are instructions as to how the swap can be performed using DISK UTITY.  Substitute You cable for the enclosure in same:
    INSTALLING A NEW HDD IN A MBP
    1. Make certain that you have backed up all of your important data.
    2. You will need a HDD enclosure.  One with a USB connection will do.  A 9 pin Firewire is better.
    3. Install your new drive in the enclosure and connect it to your MBP.
    4. Open DISK UTILITY>ERASE.  From the left hand column drag the new drive into the 'Name' field.  Make sure that the format is 'Mac OS Extended (Journaled)'.  Click on the 'Erase' button.
    5. Click on the 'Restore' button (on top).  Drag the old drive into the 'Source' field and the new drive into the 'Destination'  field.  Click on the 'Restore' button on the bottom right hand corner.
      Depending upon the amount of data you are transferring, this may take a couple hours or more.  A Firewire will speed up the transfer.  This will result in both drives having identical information on them.
    6. After the data transfer has completed, you may swap the drives.  Start the MBP and you have finished the installation.  The initial boot may take a bit longer than you are accustomed to, but that is normal.
    7. When you are satisfied that the new hard drive if functioning properly, you can erase the old drive and use it for any needs that you may have.
    If there is any confusion on your part, post back.
    Ciao.

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