Get the best deals on Apple Mac OS X 10.6, Snow Leopard DVD Operating System Software and find everything you'll need to improve your home office setup at eBay.com. Fast & Free shipping on many items! The laptop did not come with any of the original disks, but I do own a copy of the Snow Leopard (white box) retail DVD. The Macbook is already at 10.6.8. When I tried to reinstall the 10.6.3 OS, the install process eventually aborts, and the DVD is ejected. NEW Original Apple Mac OS X Snow Leopard 10.6.3 DVD retail version, sealed. 5.0 out of 5 stars. 12 product ratings - NEW Original Apple Mac OS X Snow Leopard 10.6.3 DVD retail version. To go from 10.5.8 to Snow Leopard you need the install DVDs and then from there you can upgrade via downloads. I tried to upgrade using a MacMini OS Install disk, but that didn’t work because that can only be used to restore an OS on a MacMini, not an OS install on a MacBook Pro. To do the upgrade I need a generic Snow Leopard install DVD. To go from 10.5.8 to Snow Leopard you need the install DVDs and then from there you can upgrade via downloads. I tried to upgrade using a MacMini OS Install disk, but that didn’t work because that can only be used to restore an OS on a MacMini, not an OS install on a MacBook Pro. To do the upgrade I need a generic Snow Leopard install DVD.
People give me a hard time because I work at Microsoft and use Apple products. The truth is that I dev iPhone apps and you can only do that on a Mac. I still love Microsoft and Windows, but you got to do what you got to do.
Mac Snow Leopard Cd
The short and sweet version of this post…
Call 1-800-MY-APPLE (1-800-692-7753) and order Snow Leopard from Apple directly for $19.99. It’s now longer available from the Apple online store and any other place with cost you at least $56.
The long-winded dramatic version of this post…
A user recently reported a bug in my Unstar All Google Reader™ Starred Items Extension on Mountain Lion with Chrome Beta. My old MacBook Pro only has 10.5.8 on it and the latest version of Chrome beta isn’t compatible with 10.5.8, so I couldn’t test my Chrome extension.
So I set out to upgrade from 10.5.8 to Mountain Lion. The Apple upgrade page doesn’t mention anything about how to go from 10.5.8 to Mountain Lion, so I called my local Bellevue Apple Store. They said I need to first upgrade to Snow Leopard, then Lion then Mountain Lion. To go from 10.5.8 to Snow Leopard you need the install DVDs and then from there you can upgrade via downloads. I tried to upgrade using a MacMini OS Install disk, but that didn’t work because that can only be used to restore an OS on a MacMini, not an OS install on a MacBook Pro. To do the upgrade I need a generic Snow Leopard install DVD. The only problem is that the local store doesn’t carry the Snow Leopard DVDs anymore, so they recommended I go to the Apple online store to purchase the DVD.
I searched for Snow Leopard on the Apple online store and didn’t find anything, so I called the store back. They also couldn’t find it online so they recommended I buy it from Amazon.com or eBay. I searched online and found the Snow Leopard DVDs, but they start at $65 at Amazon.com and $56 on eBay. I knew the original Snow Leopard DVDs sold for $29.99 and I wasn’t about to pay double, so I called the store back.
The store recommended that I call 1-800-MY-APPLE (1-800-692-7753) to order the DVDs directly. I just got off the phone with them after purchasing the Snow Leopard DVDs for $19.99.
So, just do yourself a favor, save some time, skip eBay, skip Amazon and just call Apple directly. I’ll have my disk in a few days and I’ll do another post on how to go from Snow Leopard to Mountain Lion.
Jon
Update: Go to Bootable USB Flash Drive to Install Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite if you want to install Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks or Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite instead. The instructions below will not work for Mac OS X 10.7 Lion or later versions.
I thought it would be useful to put the Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard installer on a USB flash drive. It would be faster than reading from a DVD. I can use it with a Macbook Air or Pro Retina which do not come with a DVD drive. And the USB flash drive is more portable and robust than a DVD.
Note: I’m doing the following on a Macbook running Snow Leopard. The resulting USB flash drive will boot on Intel-based Macs only. If you want to boot the USB flash drive on a PowerPC-based Mac, please see the comments.
Create a DMG file
You can skip creating a DMG (Disk iMaGe) file if you clone directly from the Snow Leopard “Mac OS X Install DVD” disk to the USB flash drive. I just wanted a DMG file for speed and convenience; in case I need to clone to a dual-layer DVD or to another USB flash drive.
- Insert the Snow Leopard 10.6 “Mac OS X Install DVD” disk into the DVD drive.
- Run the “Disk Utility” application (under the “Applications/Utilities” folder).
- On the left-hand pane, you will see “Mac OS X Install DVD” appear under the DVD drive when the DVD is mounted. A “Mac OS X Install DVD” disk icon will also appear on the desktop.
- If you don’t see the “Mac OS X Install DVD” even after waiting for a while, try closing and starting the “Disk Utility” application again.
- On the left-hand pane, select the “Mac OS X Install DVD” by clicking on it.
- Click on the “New Image” icon, located in toolbar at the top.
- Select the location to save the DMG file (“Mac OS X Install DVD.dmg”) to. Leave the defaults of “compressed” for “Image Format” and “none” for “Encryption”.
- Click on the “Save” button. The DMG file creation can take 20 minutes or longer.
Snow Leopard 10.6 Dvd
Format USB Flash Drive as Mac OS X Bootable
You will need an 8GB USB flash drive. Format it as a Mac OS X bootable drive by following these steps:
- Insert the USB flash drive.
- Run “Disk Utility”.
- On the left-hand pane, select the USB drive (not the FAT32 or other partition under it).
- Click on the “Erase” tab, select “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)” for “Format” and input a name like “Snow Leopard Install USB” (or anything because this will be overwritten later).
- Click the “Erase…” button and then the “Erase” button. This format operation will take less than a minute to complete.
- Once the format completes, make sure that the USB flash drive is selected in the left-hand pane. In the bottom pane, check that the “Partition Map Scheme” is set to “GUID Partition Table” (which means it is Mac OS X bootable). Under Snow Leopard, formatting as “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)” appears to select the “GUID Partition Table” scheme by default.
- If you are not running Snow Leopard and the “Partition Map Scheme” is not set to “GUID Partition Table”, please repeat steps #1-3 above and then the following alternative steps:
- Click on the “Partition” tab, select “1 Partition” under “Volume Scheme”, ensure “Mac OS Extended (Journaled)” is selected for “format”, and leave the name alone or change it to be anything (it will be overwritten later).
- Click on the “Options” button and ensure that “GUID Partition Table” is selected. Click OK.
- Click the “Apply” button and then the “Partition” button. This format operation will take less than a minute to complete.
Restore DMG file to USB Flash Drive
Restore the DMG file to the bootable USB flash drive:
- Locate the “Mac OS X Install DVD.dmg” file that was created earlier. Double-click on it to mount and launch it. You will see a “Mac OS X Install DVD” disk icon appear on the desktop. You can close the “Mac OS X Install DVD” application window that was also opened.
- Insert the Mac OS X bootable USB flash drive that we created above.
- Run the “Disk Utility” application. On the left-hand pane, you should see both the USB flash drive and the mounted DMG file.
- On the left-hand pane, select the partition under the USB flash drive.
- Click on the “Restore” tab and drag that same partition (under the USB flash drive) to the “Destination” field (you will see a green plus mouse icon appear when you drag over the field).
- If you cannot drag the “Mac OS X Install DVD” partition under the DMG file to the “Source” field (on Snow Leopard, the green plus mouse icon won’t appear and no action is taken on the drop), you can instead right-click on the “Mac OS X Install DVD” partition and select “Set as source”. The “Source” field will then be filled with the partition name.
- Even though you can click on the “Image…” button and select the DMG file, when you do the restore, Disk Utility will throw a “RESTORE FAILURE” error with the message: “Could not find any scan information. The source image needs to be image scanned before it can be restored.”
- If you are cloning directly from the “Mac OS X Install” DVD, you can just drag the partition under the DVD drive to the “Source” field.
- I left the “Erase destination” box checked. With this box checked, the restore operation took about 25 minutes. When this box was unchecked, the restore operation reported that it would require 4 hours.
- Click the “Restore” button, then the “Erase” button, and input your Mac OS X administrative password.
- When the restore completes, you may see two “Mac OS X Install DVD” application windows appear, the first from the mounted DMG file and second from the USB flash drive. There will also be two “Mac OS X Install DVD” disk icons on the desktop. Also, notice that the partition under the USB flash drive is now named the same as the source, “Mac OS X Install DVD”.
- Select the USB flash drive in the left-hand pane. In the bottom pane, double-check that the “Partition Map Scheme” is still set to “GUID Partition Table”.
- If you are not using Snow Leopard and find that the “Partition Map Scheme” is no longer set to “GUID Partition Table”, you may need to redo the restore. Reformat the USB flash drive (per the alternative instructions above) and before doing the restore, uncheck the “Erase destination” box. I fear that the “Erase destination” function may modify the partition map scheme to be something other than “GUID Partition Table”.
Boot from the USB Flash Drive
- Insert the USB flash drive.
- While starting your Mac, hold the Alt/Option key down to launch the Startup Manager.
- Select the USB flash drive to boot from; it will be labeled “Mac OS X Install DVD”.
Most of the information above was derived from: