I had my hands on mac for the first time. All I wanted was to get my hands dirty with macOS. While I was waiting for some response to my question, I was also downloading iso that is 7.83 gb from archive.org. I completed the download, but now may be need to find Dual Layer DVD to create a bootable disk out of this iso. I will give it a try to create a bootable usb out of this to install OS on this wonderfully crafted machine.
Nevertheless, Information you shared is really helpful for someone like me - who was hoping give purpose to old enough Power Mac. If my attempt to get this machine run on macOS X leopard fails, I will just archive (in my attic) this heavy aluminum box, or recycle it.
Hello, I have been trying to install the AR0821C-GMSL2 camera module from Leopard Imaging on my Jetson Nano and I am so far failing. I am getting green output even i have the L4T R32.6.1 (Jetpack 4.6) installed to my jetson. Is there an up-to-date, step by step guide on how to do it?
I am using Jetson Nano Development kit and here is the picture that you asked. I bought this camera kit and connecting it to jetson via usb as you can see in the picture. I have Jetson Orin Nx 16gb, is drivers available for it? If no, then custom drivers for both nano and orin nx would be great.
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@yussuf.shakhin
I see. You are using the USB3.0 tester instead of connecting Jetson Nano through Deserailizer + MIPI interface.
As I know, the image data from USB camera cannot work with Jetson ISP directly. (@JerryChang Please correct me if I am wrong).
This problem occurs if you boot into windows and disable the bluetooth / wifi without re-enabling it prior to installing leopard. The only way to fix it is to re-install windows, press fn + 2, then reinstall leopard.
This post is a Snow Leopard update to a process I wrote about when Leopard (10.5) came out. This post will tell you how to create a NetInstall image that will upgrade a Mac running Leopard to the latest version of Snow Leopard in one step. It will also work to upgrade a Mac running Tiger to the latest version of Snow Leopard.
Do the computers need to already boot from the Netboot server and have an image on the server for this to work or can you update a stand alone computer with this? All of our machines have a standard install locally on the computer. Thanks!
Would this process work with a Mac OS Snow Leopard CPU Drop-in DVD. Everything has worked up until the client mac mini starts the restore process. After 43 minutes remaining it fails. Any thoughts? I figured the Drop-in DVD would be a problem but wanted to try.
Does this work using server 10.6.4 NetBoot? I have tried creating a Netinstall workflow using these instructions with 10.6.1 update package and 10.6.4 combo with no luck. I also tried using the vanilla 10.6 install with the 10.6.1 & 10.6.4 update with no luck.
Slightly off topic, but if you have a Mac OS X Snow Leopard Server (unlimited client license) can you upgrade your 10.5.8 clients to Snow Leopard from it, or do you still have to buy individual client Snow Leopard licenses?
The server license is separate from client licenses. Unlimited simply means that any number of clients can use the server simultaneously. You will need to purchase a client license for each computer you upgrade to Snow Leopard.
Strange thing happened. I want so sell my old Macbook and therefore used a disk image of the Snow Leopard DVD that I restored onto an external drive. I booted off the drive and went through the installation steps.
Now I really would like to perform "archive and install", as there might be some files that I need later, but I didn't see the option. The only options for installation I had, were, including others, optional printer drivers and Rosetta. So I just clicked through and I wasn't given any other option.
As I understand it, the main reason Archive and Install was there was to allow downgrading (i.e. reinstalling over a newer version). Snow Leopard is capable of doing an in-place downgrade, so the A&I capability was deemed redundant.
If you're selling the Mac, A&I is the wrong thing to do anyway. You really should back up everything you might need (the entire disk if you're not sure) to an external drive that you're going to keep, and then do a full erase of the internal drive to make sure the buyer isn't getting any of your private information.
IIRC, there is an option (button?) on the install disk's first screen which opens up the options you're looking for. (They've tried to make upgrading be the straight-through path, so any other kind of install requires you finding an option screen).Another approach would be to
Edit: Upon trying my install disk this morning, I found only a Utilities button which will, among other things, let you erase the hard disk before doing an install, but doesn't seem to offer archiving (at least, I wasn't willing to go any farther to find out!). So I guess making and saving off a .dmg is the best & only solution for this case.
This support note from Apple describes how to restore the machine to factory defaults, but note: it will not save anything from the current installation. Do that first, if you intend to do it at all.
I'm not sure we have the hole picture or totally understand the situation, but one thing is for sure, if you have a time machine plugged in your system and clicked ok during install, it is totally possible you restored a full system as you were going along the necessary steps.
Then you want to be sure and erase using at least a 3 pass solution (either using the install DVD in the disk utility - in the top menu or using a linux DVD with similar commands). Unless you're working with the NSA, this should be more than enough to remove data on you're drive.
So I created a .dmg file from the install disc and then copy that on a usb drive using SuperDuper. When I check my startup disks from preferences I can see the usb drive so I select it and click restart. When it restarts I just get a grey screen and nothing happens.
Also as soon as I open the computer (and desktop appears), the flash drive opens and I can click on "Install OSX", same window that pops from the DVD. It asks admin password then restart and again the same grey screen.
You think the problem is with making the bootable drive or with the .dmg file?I had to convert the installation disk from .iso to .dmg using "convert" from disk util and then renamed the destination file to .dmg> convert.
With that said, one of the comments notes that you need to partition your USB thumbstick with a GUID partition table, and, while not stated, I would certainly use the HFS+ filesystem for your partition. Did you do it that way? It also appears that you need a flash drive that is at least 8 GB in size.
just a wild thought that I'll throw out, but would be more trouble than it is worth for one computer, and it well beyond the scope of what you really want to do. You could set up NetBooting to send an image file for the computer to boot up from over the network. Buy Mac OS X Server from the App Store if you are using Lion (and download Apple's server admin tools so you can run Server Admin), or try out JAMF software's NetBoot Appliance (that will run as a virtual machine, under OS X, Windows, or Linux), and (hand waving here; you might be able to use "System Imaging Utility" in the server tools) set up a NetBoot image of your installer DVD to install the software.
I have a friend with a 2011 MacBook Pro. The idea is to clone a freshly installed SL onto the Mini. The two Macs seem to be identical, but I'm afraid that there is something that I'm overlooking. Any ideas or observations regarding this idea?
I have had the chance to see it myself, including some testing. The Mac Mini was the 2,3 GHz i5. To cut it short: The system was slow, flickering monitor, the cursor (and the entire system) was freezing occasionally, and only HDMI was working.
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.
Having written this and noticing the silence in this thread, I would like to add, that I really don't want to discourage anybody trying this. I think, more has to happen, than my (and other's) naive efforts to get SL on this Mac Mini. Eventually, a hack will come out, or a system update will remedy the problems. I will keep my eyes open. As it stands, I assume it is o.k. to mark the question as answered (written one month later).
The general online consensus is that installing Snow Leopard an a 2011 Mini is NOT possible. The problem is apparently the 2011 Mini's new chip expectations of a fully 64-bit compliant system environment, the loss of necessary drivers that are part of Lion (for example, for the 2011 Mini's graphics processing and/or the Radeon GPU) that don't exist in Snow Leopard or in previous Minis, and other little sabotages that are improvements.
The reason why I am asking at ifixit is because maybe someone here knows how the Mini essentially differs in hardware from the "iMac early 2011" or the "MacBook Pro early 2011" (both running SL originally).
These Macs and the Mini have at least this in common: Intel Core i5 processor, Thunderbolt, Intel HD Graphics 3000, 1333 MHz DDR3 SDRAM. The high end models have different Radeon graphics or different RAM, though. And here's a link to a German website where someone has successfully booted his Mini from a MBP in target mode: =467938
You can install Snow Leopard on any Mac Mini with a Intel CPU. I'm not certain your preferred method of installation will work unless a retail copy of the OS was used on the MacBook Pro. Apple tends to be fussy that way. You can give it a try but no guarantees. With the cost of a Retail copy of Snow Leopard at $29 I would buy a copy and have it available for future needs. My .02--YMMV
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