I just bought a new 1TB Seagate Sata Solid State and properly installed it into my 2006 model Macbook because I was running out of space. But I can't figure out how to get snow leopard back on. I've been researching all day and I've tried partitioning the Snow Leopard installation disc and it wouldn't let and I've also tried using my 500gb external hard drive with the time machine back up but that also won't work. I'm not sure what to do and when I go to disc utility it picks up my new hard drive, so I'm pretty sure it's compatible.

And also, I've seen people talk about the "GUID" and in the disc utility when I click on my external hard drive it says "Partition Map Scheme: GUID Partition Table" what exactly will that do? I'm trying to get all of my files from my external hard drive onto the new hard drive. I also have the snow leopard operating system on the external hard drive


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When the MBP boots, select Disk Utility and opt for Disk Utility>Restore. In the 'Source' field drag the external HDD and in the 'Destination' field drag the internal HDD (from the left hand column). Click on Restore. All of the data on the externall HDD data will be copied to the new internal drive, including the OSX. Then you will have an operable Mac.

The advantage of cloning is that it copies all of your data from the original HDD to the new one in one step. In order to do that, you have to place the the new drive or the original internal drive in an enclosure to make the clone.

Yes, you can use an external drive (one purchased with a HDD already in an enclosure) but you have to copy the data from the Macbook to the external drive with the original HDD still in the Macbook. Then you can insert the new SSHD in the Macbook, install the OSX, and then transfer your user data from the external drive

The other option is to install your original HDD into the Macbook and then clone it to the external drive. Install the new SSHD in the Macbook and then clone from the external drive to the Macbook SSHD. This is a two stem process eliminating a new enclosure.

Alright, since I have already copied my whole system and all of my data onto my external I'm gonna try to just install snow leopard onto the new hard drive using the disc and then try from there. If that doesn't work I'll go buy an enclosure. I'll let you know how it goes, thanks again!

If the answer to the first question is YES and the second is NO, Install the old hard drive in the enclosure and connect it to the MBP. Start the MBP holding the OPTION key. The display should show icons for the the external and internal hard drives. Select the external hard drive. This should start the MBP.

I also tried putting the old hard drive in the enclosure and I got it to run but it's running off of the old one and not the new hard drive that is currently installed in the macbook. So I tried switching the start disc to the new one and it just wouldn't even show up as an option. So I downloaded a copy of snow leopard of the internet and tried installing it on to the new one but it said it could not be installed on the new hard drive and that an error occured while evaluating Javascript for the package. I don't understand why none of these attempts are working. I have the gray disc for snow leopard by the way.

I suggest booting from your Snow Leopard DVD while holding "C" key on your computer. Then once in the installer, you can select the destination drive of OS X Snow Leopard. Make sure to pick the external drive that you want.

Called Applecare, they were willing to help, and their approach was the same as on this board. Can't explain it other than it's the disc., However I can install the disc into the optical drive and it is read, but I get the warning that it can't be installed.

I just had this exact same problem. A lot of people have been suggesting to use an external hard drive to put the Snow Leopard installation media on. This can be slow (eww, USB), and not everyone has a large enough external drive.

Once done, hit 'Apply'. This should take 5-10 minutes, but don't worry if it takes more (especially with a larger hard drive). You should leave your system alone whilst it is applying the changes, and it should not take any longer than 1 hour.

You either have to go out of your way (removing hard disk, risky downloading) or spend some money (external drive, or get yours fixed). Unfortunately there is no solution which will be cheap AND easy.

If you have access to an external USB or Firewire hard drive and another computer that does have a working CD drive, you could use the other computer to clone the Leopard CD onto the external drive, and install from there.

IMPORTANT: This solution is based on your comment that you have backups of all your files etc. Proceeding with this will reformat your hard drive - so proceed carefully and ensure you have a current backup!

I've got a bit of an issue, I've been given five mac books with snow leopard installed with two accounts. An admin account which no one has the login details for (setup by a previous employee) and a standard user account. The standard user account doesn't have permissions to do anything and I mean anything, you cannot view PDF files or listen to MP3 it requires admin privileges. So pretty much these laptops are useless at the moment, I was going to download snow leopard and just do a fresh install however I thought I'd ask here first. Is there some way to reset the admin credentials if I boot into recovery, or something similar to Windows Hirens for OSX.

So Command and R doesn't seem to work on any of the macbooks I made a bootable USB drive with a dmg of snow leopard using transmac and when I boot using the options key I only get the mac hard drive as an option.


I recently upgraded a 2011 MacBook Pro, with Snow Leopard, to El Capitan. My client had never upgraded the OS when the new ones were made available. It hit critical mass when Chrome, Firefox, and Safari no longer worked with certain websites and newer versions of the browsers were no longer being supported on the OS. Apple has discontinued support of Snow Leopard as well. I'd suggest a clean install of the OS and apps. Getting logged into the laptops may have proven irrelevant if you simply replaced the drives with SSDs, but its always kind of a good feeling when you manage to 'beat the system'.


Snow Leopard was released to the public in late August 2009 and Seagate has evaluated the current product lines to determine which ones will work with MacOS 10.6 (Snow Leopard). For our external drive products whose hardware is supported, Apple Time Machine is a very good backup solution.

For more information on Apple Time Machine, please see:

Note: Installing the Seagate Diagnostic software for Mac will disable the auto-sleep features on the FreeAgent Desktop and OneTouch 4 drives, so the drive sleep will be controlled by the MacOS sleep feature.

The biggest problem I have with clover right now is no-matter which settings I put it doesn't give me any useful info when I try to boot with my OSX 10.6 containing partition - it just freezes on its nice pretty but useless GUI selection screen. I believe with older versions it gave me some meaningless numbers at least.


Currently I'm trying to boot the OS X 10.6 installation DVD using it. Before that I tried to boot the already installed OS (I used MBR based boot-loader to install it before) with the same luck.


I already hate Clover so much - is there any alternative to it for the 10.6?


Like it's un-acceptable for me that Clover is ignoring my simplest request to acquire more information about why the heck it isn't booting Snow leopard.



And before anyone asks - I want to install Snow Leopard because it supports Rosetta and so I can run Power PC games on it.

This problem happens because the Snow Leopard installer detects a small discrepancy in the partition table of the drive, and assumes booting off the drive may not be successful. The fixes involve rewriting the table without formatting the drive, but if that does not work then formatting should definitely work (provided you have a backup).

The first thing to do is run Disk Utility or, even better, run a third-party utility program to check out the drive to ensure it is functioning correctly. Fixing any errors may require booting off a volume other than the boot volume (i.e., the Snow Leopard DVD or a Drive Genius DVD), and performing the fixes from there.

This problem might happen even if the drive checks out with various disk utility software. The way around this is to have Disk Utility repartition the drive, which, luckily, can be done without having to format the drive. To do this, boot from the Snow Leopard DVD and select your language. Then launch "Disk Utility" from the "Utilities" menu and perform the following steps:

If you have a full system backup via Time Machine or a drive clone, you can format your boot drive and do a clean install of OS X. To do this, first be sure your backups are complete and accessible, and then boot off the Snow Leopard DVD (click the "Utilities" button instead of "Continue" in the Leopard installer, or reboot and hold the "C" key to boot off the CD/DVD drive). When the installer loads, select your language and then launch "Disk Utility" from the "Utilities" menu and perform the following steps:

In this procedure, you can migrate from either your Time Machine backup, or from a cloned drive. Keep in mind that when you do this you may need to reinstall some programs since a clean install may break some application dependency links to system files.

The Mini was booted from an external USB drive. The system was installed on a MBP 2011/Thunderbolt, from the original installer. The same problems occured as SL was installed on a MBP 2007 - from a retail DVD to the USB drive, and updated to 10.6.8. System profiler has recognized all hardware in both cases. 2351a5e196

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