Mac OS X Snow Leopard: The Missing Manual, 1st Edition
by David Pogue
Mac OS X Snow Leopard Pocket Guide, 1st Edition
by Chris Seibold
Apple Training Series: Mac OS X Support Essentials v10.6
by Kevin M. White
Mac OS X Leopard: The Missing Manual
by David Pogue
Apple Training Series Mac OS X Server Essentials v10.6: A Guide to Using and Supporting Mac OS X Server v10.6
by Arek Dreyer; Ben Greisler
Start on the right foot with Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard! Little is more exciting and unnerving than a major operating system upgrade for your Mac, but thousands of people have upgraded to Panther and Tiger calmly and successfully with the advice in Joe Kissell's previous hit Take Control of Upgrading... titles. Joe's expert guidance, developed over innumerable test installations, walks you through the six steps necessary before upgrading, which of Leopard's three installation options is right for you, how to perform the actual upgrade, and post-installation checking and cleanup. Worried that something might go wrong? Joe provides in-depth discussions of what exactly each installation option does (and does not do), how to restore missing files, practical troubleshooting tips for the most common problems, and even step-by-step instructions to downgrade to your previous system if necessary. You'll also find tips on a few things that may surprise you, including special notes on Spotlight, Apple Mail, Keychain, and Time Machine. Bonus Section! Direct links to software update sites for FireWire hard drives, keyboards, mice, printers, scanners, video cards, audio equipment, common utilities, and more. Read this ebook to learn the answers to questions like:
Will my Mac and peripherals work with Leopard?
Which upgrade method should I use?
Should I partition my hard disk before upgrading?
Which files aren't copied by Archive and Install?
What if I can't print after upgrading?
Do I need new versions of my utilities for Leopard?
What should I do if my Mac refuses to boot under Leopard?
What should I do if Time Machine wants me to let it start backing up?
Top Level Categories:
Operating Systems
Sub-Categories:
Operating Systems > Macintosh OS
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