Hi All,

The Apple Recovery Disk Assistant method is useful because it will work for 
systems which come with the operating system (either Lion or Mountain Lion) 
already installed -- for example, if you buy a new Mac, and want to make a 
bootable recovery disk.  The method of using SuperDuper! to make a bootable USB 
memory stick (or SD card, as Shaun asked about) requires you to have purchased 
and downloaded an update from the Mac App Store.

The information on using SuperDuper! can be found on John Panarese's 
MacfortheBlind.com site:
http://macfortheblind.com/how-to-for-the-Mac-and-OS-X
Look under the heading "How To Make a Bootable Lion Install Disk on a USB Thumb 
Drive"

Another interesting point that Shaun's question about using an SD card reminded 
me of -- the recent MacBook Pro and MacBook Air models come with an SD card 
slot, so using this as a boot drive is particularly simple.  In fact, there's 
an interesting KickStarter project on for "The Nifty MiniDrive".  It's for a 
device that lets you insert MicroSD cards into this slot, so you can carry 
additional storage capacity with you in a way that sits flush against the edge 
of your laptop, rather like the Sim card slots in the iPad. This has the 
largest potential advantage for MacBook Air users, since the hard drive storage 
capacity can't be increased after purchase.  They design this for MicroSD cards 
so you can carry the cards entirely inside the laptop without having regular SD 
cards extend outside the opening with the danger that they will snap off if you 
leave them in the slot.  At present you can buy 64 GB micro SD cards that work 
in the Nifty Minidrive, but the MicroSD card format i
 n principle can be made for up to 2 Terabyte capacity.

If you're interested, here's the URL for the Kickstarter Nifty MiniDrive page:
http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1342319572/the-nifty-minidrive
They've already raised pledges for 300 times their funding goal of $11,000 to 
make the device, and there's 5 more days to still accept project backers.

HTH.  Cheers,

Esther

> On Jul 28, 2012, at 7:41 AM, Gordon Smith wrote:
> 
>> That's exactly what the recovery tool is for Sarah.  It isn't necessary to 
>> pre-format the drive as the partition is written block by block when you 
>> attempt to write your boot device.  Sean, Try the recovery tool and point it 
>> to your flash card and see what happens.  If the flash card isn't listed in 
>> valid install devices, then it isn't going to work.
>> 
>> Gordon

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