[mac4theblind] Re: A primer for thos wishing to upgrade to Mavericks.

  • From: Edward Redfern <edwardredfern@xxxxxxx>
  • To: mac4theblind@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Wed, 23 Oct 2013 14:52:21 +0100

David, if you actually took the time to read the post and instructions in it's 
entirety you would realise that what you've just done is tell a user 
conflicting info. Advising a user to boot into recovery console mode and doing 
a 3x pass disk erase is not necessary. unless it's a security requirement. that 
means on a 5400rpm disk that's approx 2 hours messing around. If you realised 
that downloading and building a pen drive or external HDD toolkit saved you 
approx 1.5 hours of download and server connection time, a wired ethernet 
connection in it's first instance, etc. this is a safer, more stable and faster 
method which I've deployed across several workstations, servers and more. 
besides the use of Server within OS X to deploy installations.

the other conflict you're applying is the fact that doing this is only an 
instance recovery to the CURRENT OS installed and NOT an upgrade instance which 
you have to purchase, install and then allow it to update EFI boot for the 
newer version.

lew

On 23 Oct 2013, at 14:46, David Hilbert Poehlman <poehlman1@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> if you want to do a fresh install as opposed to the upgrade which this post 
> recommends you do which I disagree with, do the following:
> 1> open the recovery console with command-r right after the start up chime.
> 2> turn vo on after a bit, because it will be off.  command f5 will be 
> sufficient.
> 3> choose disc utility and erace your hd partition with ml on it three passes 
> will be enough.
> 4>  When this is done, choose the install macosx from the table and follow 
> the instructions and you'll have a clean install.
> one caviot, you may need a hardwired connection to start the process because 
> it has been my experience that forst, it's a large download and second, wifi 
> may not be available through recovery.
> 
> Enjoy!
> 
> On Oct 23, 2013, at 9:16 AM, Kim Kilpatrick <kimjkilpatrick@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
> Hi I'm a bit confused here.
> When I installed the mac upgrade software last summer, I just installed it.
> I had backed up files first but I did not do all of the things with an 
> external drive etc?
> Why do I have to do this?
> Can't I just install it like an update?
> Kim
> 
> On 2013-10-23, at 6:27 AM, Edward Redfern <edwardredfern@xxxxxxx> wrote:
> 
>> ladies and gentlemen (In the style of Kraftwerk's Vocoder)
>> 
>> I'm going to write this primer today on performing a new installation of 
>> Mavericks. With this article, I'll be covering how to perform a media 
>> creation setup and a clean install.
>> 
>> Before I do this, I am going to stress the following very carefully so that 
>> I have no contradictions  to deal with.
>> 
>> 1: I do not recommend an upgrade over a current OS as there are certain 
>> tested and known errors with certain previous software.
>> 
>> WHAT YOU'LL NEED
>> 
>> an 8GB or higher USB pen drive or an external hard drive with a spare 
>> partition you can create as a bootable partition.
>> OS X Mavericks 10.9 available from the app store. (THIS IS FREE!)
>> Latest versions of Garageband, iMovie and iPhoto from iTunes (garageband is 
>> free)
>> Latest Versions of Pages, Numbers & Keynote (Neither are free updates) *Free 
>> with purchase of new mac / iOS product*
>> Server V3 (if you require a server. if you have purchased server for 
>> mountain lion, you still have to pay the upgrade cost)
>> (These items can be purchased on the app store and then moved to a drive as 
>> a backup or purchased and installed into Mavericks)
>> 
>> Firstly your preparations:
>> 
>> As mentioned above, you're going to need a bootable external drive. I highly 
>> advise against a DVD instance of this installer as it's remarkably slow.  
>> 
>> If using a pen drive, 8gb or more is required as a boot instance for the 
>> software and any necessary extras.
>> *if creating an extra partition on a USB or other external HDD I advise a 
>> 20gb  partition size or there abouts. this covers upgrades / partition 
>> rewrites / extra tools to keep  available as your emergency toolkit*
>> 
>> GET READY TO CREATE YOUR STORAGE MEDIA FOR MAVERICKS!…
>> 
>> 1: connect your USB pen drive or external hard drive, etc to your mac.
>> 2: Launch Disk utility. (Macintosh HD/Applications/Utilities)
>> PEN DRIVE METHOD:
>> Select your pen drive in the "Selected Disks" window in disk utility and tab 
>> to the erase tab.
>> interact with the partition type combo box and select Mac OS X Extended 
>> Journaled.
>> Name your Pen drive OS X.
>> tab to the erase button and enter on it. confirm erase and your pen drive is 
>> ready.
>> 
>> HARD DRIVE METHOD:
>> This is for anyone who, like me uses an external hard drive as a tool box 
>> with multiple partitions.
>> Select your hard drive in disk utility's "Selected disks" window. don't 
>> select the partitions if there's more than 1. select the controller name as 
>> disk utility shows a tree view method. EXAMPLE. Seagate Corp: (controller) 
>> /disk-0= DATA, /disk-1= files. etc. Select the "Seagate Corp" as an example. 
>> this may differ completely to each drive.
>> tab to the "Partition" tab. this now gives you the ability to include and 
>> resize partitions. what you need to do here is include a partition by 
>> interacting with the Add button found at the bottom of the partition scheme 
>> window (this shows partitions as blocks with names and resize handles) With 
>> your new partition, create it as a 20gb partition and name it OS X. ensure 
>> it's formatted as OS X extended Journaled.
>> tab to the Apply button to write the partition map. This is the best and 
>> only safe way to do this. if you use the partition combo box at the top, 
>> this wipes the whole map and creates new partition schemes so unless your 
>> drive's clean of any unwanted data, do not use the partition combo box at 
>> the top of the partition map.
>> 
>> QUIT DISK UTILITY! This is so you don't make any mistakes!
>> 
>> 
>> OK, hard bit's nearly over. Now for the fun stuff!
>> 
>> Assuming you've downloaded your OS X Mavericks from the App Store, do the 
>> following: 
>> (Once OS X has downloaded it launches the install window. QUIT IT)
>> 1: go to your applications folder in your hard drive (example: Macintosh 
>> HD/applications.) Find the file Install OS X Mavericks.app.
>> 2: Perform the following key combo: Control Option Shift M (VO Shift M or 
>> right click context menu) on this file and  enter on "Show Package Contents.
>> 3: You are presented with a window with 1 folder "Contents". open this 
>> window and go to a folder called "SharedSupport" open this folder and you 
>> will have two items. the main item to concern yourself  with is the file 
>> "InstallESD.DMG" open this file. this is now mounted in the finder and also 
>> in disk utility.
>> 
>> Now the file preparations are done. this is where  you need to concentrate 
>> carefully.
>> 
>> 1: Run Disk utility (Macintosh HD/Applications/Utilities/)
>> 2: Navigate to the "Restore" tab. This is where you start the creation 
>> process of your new installation media.
>> 3: navigate to your "Selected Disks" window. Here you'll find your OS X 
>> drive you've created / named and also the installer.
>> 4: Select your "OS X" pen or external hard drive partition and do a VO SHIFT 
>> M and go to Set as Destination"
>> 5: Select the "OS X Install ESD" volume which is under InstallESD.DMG in the 
>> "Selected Disks" window. (window splitter indicates virtual disks). perform 
>> the same process VO SHIFT M and this time "Select as source". 
>> WARNING: This only works when you have the "Restore" tab selected.
>> WARNING: If both the "Source" and "Destination" fields show "OS X" or 
>> "InstallESD.DMG" The restore process will not continue. If this occurs Do 
>> the following:
>> IF SOURCE AND DESTINATION SHOW OS X, GO BACK TO "SELECTED DISKS" WINDOW, 
>> SELECT OS X INSTALL ESD, VO SHIFT M. SET AS SOURCE THEN HIT ENTER. Please 
>> confirm this by checking both fields. If it's the other way around, reverse 
>> the procedure.
>> 6: Now that you have selected your source and destination, tab to the 
>> "Restore" Button and hit enter. This comes up with a message asking you to 
>> confirm you want to do so, tell it to continue and leave Disk utility to 
>> write the source files to the drive you're using.
>> 
>> FINALLY!
>> 
>> Once disk utility has created your drive, your new recovery drive will mount 
>> (this happens in most cases) and shows a window with your tools and install 
>> source. quit disk utility, close your window. do any backups of data either 
>> through time machine or manual backups, superduper or any other tools you 
>> use and get ready to install Mavericks as a clean install.
>> 
>> TO INSTALL MAVERICKS AS A CLEAN ENVIRONMENT:
>> 
>> 1: reboot your mac.
>> 2: when the chime sounds, press "Option" If you're not happy or comfortable 
>> with this, before you reboot your mac, go to system preferences, go to the 
>> "STARTUP DISK" preference pane and select your OS X or Mavericks or whatever 
>> it's been renamed to drive and ask it to restart.
>> 3: When you're presented with the new installer, launch Voiceover with 
>> Command F5 (FN command F5 for macbooks / macbook pro's in some instances)
>> 4: As a clean install, run Disk utility and select "Macintosh HD" (or 
>> whatever you've called your system drive) and go to the "erase" tab. erase 
>> "Macintosh HD, ensure your drive is being formatted as OS X Extended 
>> Journaled and named Macintosh HD or whatever you like to call it (some users 
>> with networked macs ID their drives to each machine as machine name "Macbook 
>> HD" etc)
>> 5: Once your drive's formatted, quit disk utility (Command Q) and  continue 
>> the installation of OS X. within this environment, you'll be asked to agree 
>> to terms, select the drive to install to (Macintosh HD), etc and allow it to 
>> do it's thing. When your mac reboots, give it a few seconds and press 
>> Command F5 to run voiceover. away you go.
>> 
>> To ensure you get the best out of your setup, After installing OS X, setting 
>> up your user account, iCloud and all the other good stuff, go to the App 
>> Store and either purchase (if you haven't already done so before doing your 
>> install) or download your new versions of garageband, iPhoto and iMovie, 
>> iWork (Pages, Numbers & keynote) and if you're using your mac as a server 
>> then Server V3 and XCode if you're a developer. let them download and 
>> install. from there, it's a question of launching apps when installed and 
>> setting them up as requested by the installers.
>> 
>> When I get chance, I'll publish some suitable settings to make your mac 
>> fully tuned.
>> 
>> If you have issues with the process explained and require more support, 
>> please email me at Edwardredfern@xxxxxxx
>> 
>> Yours. Lew
>> Edward Lewis Redfern
>> Moderator / Support
>> ℅ Mac For The Blind
>> Direct Email: edwardredfern@xxxxxxx
>> 
> 
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