- #MAC OS 10.6.8 UPGRADE TO 10.7 MAC OS X#
- #MAC OS 10.6.8 UPGRADE TO 10.7 INSTALL#
- #MAC OS 10.6.8 UPGRADE TO 10.7 UPDATE#
Developers need to update most applications to support Lion, but you can also quickly check for incompatible applications by looking at System Profiler to identify PowerPC applications – these don’t work. You want to make sure Lion supports the apps you depend on. Optional: Run the software update again and obtain the latest Migration Assistant download if you plan to transfer data from your 10.6 Snow Leopard Mac to another Lion-compatible MacĢ) Check application compatibility and update applications.
#MAC OS 10.6.8 UPGRADE TO 10.7 MAC OS X#
#MAC OS 10.6.8 UPGRADE TO 10.7 INSTALL#
Now - I understand that "things happen" during an install to update an existing system. However, I would simply run Repair Disk on your hard drive, and NOT erase, then Quit, and run Update OS X - updating your wife's iMac directly, which will eliminate all your other steps. Reboot to the Mavericks installer (it's bootable, if you used DiskMakerX to create it.) You can then delete your step 3 as you can run Disk Utility booted from the installer, and erase the complete hard drive then (if you want to). I would modify your steps, starting with:Ĥ. That would be hard on the hard drive, if nothing else, and for no reasonable use. Unless I am missing something about what you listed, why would you do a full erase of the internal hard drive TWO times? Why would you take the time to do an erase/install MavX/erase the same drive AGAIN/clone your backup to the drive you just erased a second time, then REINSTALL MavX to upgrade that full system that you just cloned back. If there is a full backup, then you have little to fear from the upgrade process. There's no need to mention that Mavericks will create a recovery partition - it will (without asking on a normal hard drive install) My feeling is my 7 step plan is safer because it does not involve moving user directories and applications, etc., back into place from TM. Which way is preferable? Are there other methods? I can replace steps 5-7 above with the Migration Assistant pulling my stuff from my TM disk. I also run Time Machine - it too is part of the above back up step.
This is a "clean" install due to the previous step, so it's supposed to offer to create a recovery partition. Run Mavericks installer from thumb drive.Part of previous step is a SuperDuper! (SD) update. As part of the process, I would like to create a recovery partition to use in emergencies going forward. I would like to upgrade her to Mavericks and have already prepared a thumb drive with DiskMaker X.