![]() I then had to buy a 10.5.4 disc to get it to boot properly. I bought 10.5.0 on launch day, then when I upgraded my graphics card to the Nvidia 8800GT, I could no longer boot from the 10.5.0 disc. If you don't have the original Leopard disc, you'll HAVE to do an upgrade-install or you'll have to go and buy a full version of Snow Leopard. It will read the disc for a second to confirm that it's Leopard, then spit it back out and ask for the Snow Leopard disc again. When you go to install the OS, you can do an erase and install but, before you are able to continue, the installer will ask the user to insert a valid Leopard disc to continue. I think the most logical thing Apple could do is put the full version of Mac OS X on the install disc, but have it hidden. I don't think it will be "Confirmed" until someone actually has the disc and tries it.Īnyways.
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