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2014-06-04 07:37 PM
2014-06-04 11:13 PM
Note: Macs newer than April 1, 2010 but older than July 20, 2011 must use the original 10.6 installer disc that shipped with them to boot 10.6 from CD. AppleCare may have those discs if you lost or misplaced it. To determine the age of a Mac, plug it in the support status search engine, and use the serial number lookup. Using the model name, find the release date of that model on Wikipedia or Everymac.com, and the followup date.Macs older than April 2010 can run Snow Leopard. I'm not sure how much older and which models: My Mac Pro (see signature) is from March 2008, but I can reboot it in Snow Leopard but normally run the latest version of Mavericks. I'm also not sure if the newest Macs can run Snow Leopard (probably doesn't have drivers that will work with the newest graphics cards?)?
2014-06-04 11:46 PM
Macbook Pro M1 Max 64GB ram, OS X 10.XX latest
another Moderator
2014-06-11 10:35 PM
Karl wrote:
Wow. A G3!
Snow Leopard is the most recent OS X version that will run Rosetta on an Intel Mac to let you run AC 7.
You do NOT need anything that enables Classic apps. That's way too old.😉 Just need the ability to run PPC apps on newer hardware...which is what the Rosetta PPC emulator was about.
You also do not need to be stuck with Snow Leopard. Just need the newest hardware capable of booting into Snow Leopard. You use Disk Utility to repartition your Mac with two boot partitions... one Snow Leopard for when you need to run AC 9 or earlier... and the other with the most recent version of OS X the hardware is capable of running. Keep in mind that there are no more security updates for Snow Leopard.
If you are currently using another, newer Intel Mac... this dual boot option is the best one. If you do not have a copy of Snow Leopard, Apple is still selling it (physical media):
http://store.apple.com/us/product/MC573Z/A/mac-os-x-106-snow-leopard
But, this page:
https://discussions.apple.com/docs/DOC-2455
notes:Note: Macs newer than April 1, 2010 but older than July 20, 2011 must use the original 10.6 installer disc that shipped with them to boot 10.6 from CD. AppleCare may have those discs if you lost or misplaced it. To determine the age of a Mac, plug it in the support status search engine, and use the serial number lookup. Using the model name, find the release date of that model on Wikipedia or Everymac.com, and the followup date.Macs older than April 2010 can run Snow Leopard. I'm not sure how much older and which models: My Mac Pro (see signature) is from March 2008, but I can reboot it in Snow Leopard but normally run the latest version of Mavericks. I'm also not sure if the newest Macs can run Snow Leopard (probably doesn't have drivers that will work with the newest graphics cards?)?
2014-06-11 11:33 PM
Dave wrote:Yes... if the Mac you buy is capable of running SL (due to graphics card compatibility). Rosetta is part of SL, but as I recall, it is installed as an option, or later on-demand. No problems with WIBU key. There are issues with Codemeter keys... as CM keys cannot run versions prior to AC 10. For the AC 7 SL WIBU driver, see:
Haha
Thanks for the response
So
I should be able to purchase Snow Leopard
Put it on a partition on my external drive
Does Rosetta automatically come/load with SL?
Do you know of any issues with the wibo key?
Thanks again
Dave
2014-06-12 07:24 PM
I have a 13" MacBook Air 4gb 1600mhz intel HS graphics 5000This Air just meets the absolute minimum requirements to run current versions of AC. For AC 7, it'll no doubt be fine as it exceeds the specs of machines available way that long ago.
1.3ghz intel core i5 processor
which I believe only has 250gb SSd
My external backup has double that
Usb3 yes
Macs that were released new as of July 20, 2011 or later, will generally not run Snow Leopard unless you follow this tip for Snow Leopard Server virtualization.where that tip link goes to: