First yes, if you reboot the machine, you of course will need to insert the DVD prior to booting. In fact in order for the Mac to boot off the DVD it needs to be in there in advance for you to hold down the c key or set it as the boot disk. As far as space required, I am not sure of the exact space, but figure on around 10Gb or less, but no more than 12Gb total if all the languages are installed etc. Either way, it's going to be less than the current version since printer drivers you don't need will not be installed. Don't worry, you'll have plenty of space as long as you have at least 20 or so Gb free if you do the upgrade. Once things are running fine, you can delete the old system, which is backed up prior to the upgrade process.
On Aug 24, 2009, at 4:45 PM, Marie Howarth wrote: > > thanks for that scott. stupid question maybe, but I'm guessing you put > the disc in then shut down then turn on with the disc in the drive, > while holding down the c key yes? how much room we talking, I got over > a hundred gig here as my music stuff is on an external. > :) thanks for any answers. > > On Aug 24, 2009, at 9:41 PM, Scott Chesworth wrote: > >> >> Hey Marie, >> >> Well I guess not many people can say for sure right now what the >> instalation process will be like in detail, seeing as the only people >> who will have seen it firsthand so far are beta testers and people >> who >> grabbed it off torrent sites, and neither will talk about it >> publically in case Steve Jobs and his heavies turn up at their house >> with a big stick. >> >> But having said that, it's safe to predict that VO will work during >> the instalation, and that it'll be easy to do. >> With Tiger and Leopard, the install was as simple as putting in your >> OS dvd, booting up with the c key held down, waiting a few minutes >> until the disc spins down so you know that everything has finished >> loading from it, and launching VO with f/n-command-f5 on a laptop or >> just command-f5 on a full keyboard. You land in the language >> selection table, which is set to some variety of English by default, >> and from then on it's a pretty standard instalation wizard. There >> are >> usually a few different choices, you can repartition and format and >> suchlike. Archive and install is probably the safest choice if >> you've >> got the disc space for that, it'll preserve a copy of your leopard >> system libraries and such just in case the upgrade goes horribly >> wrong. VO stays functional throughout the upgrade process, you can >> get feedback at any point, and I've never yet encountered an error >> that it won't read during the process. >> >> Past that, the only reassurance I can give you is that, having seen >> your posts on list about other apps, you'll be fine with this. >> It's a >> peace of cake as they say. >> >> hth >> Scott >> >> On 8/24/09, Marie Howarth <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> I was wondering, as I'm sure everyone's either preordered or is >>> going >>> to pre-order the next big cat, how easy it will be to install with >>> no >>> sighted assistance. would someone maybe be so kind to possibly >>> write a >>> guide. I want to be able to do this but I'm a little apprhensive. >>> obviously never installed an OS before. a little daunting to say the >>> least. >>> :) >>> >>> >>>> >>> >> >>> > > > > --~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~ You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MacVisionaries" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en -~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---
