Originally posted by richierich
may be a stupid question but how do you format the hard disk!
I am new to macs so am unsure.......
Originally posted by HasanDaddy
if I upgrade from 10.1.5 HFS+ to Jaguar HFS+, will I have to wipe my entire drive in order to get the Mac OS Extended, or no?
(I hope that made sense)
in other words, can I still have an HFS+ operating system, without wiping my drive, after installing Jaguar?
THANKS!
Originally posted by Geek73
After using a PC since IBM DOS v2.11, I have learned to slick the HD and do a clean install whenever possible in the Windows world. (In fact, slicking my HD every two months or so is one of the reasons I bought a Mac several weeks ago...) After becoming a Macintosh believer, I'd like to think that the Upgrade path is fairly robust, but I hear a lot of persons talk about slicking hardrives prior to installing Jaguar. I've got my Jag CD's next to me, but wanted to know some of your experiences: Do I slick with the Archive option, or just do an Upgrade?
Geek73
HA!! got ya beat...I have been working with PC's since DOS 1.2 (the original IBM PC 8086) but now work on both sides of the street. As for the option to upgrade or initalize the drive and do a clean install I would just do the Archive and save your user info. I have loaded 10.2 on probably 7 computers now and ready backuped the data so it wasn't that bad nuking the drive...but in general either the upgrade or archive options should be fine. On both of my systems I just did the upgrade and things have been running smooth
Originally posted by Geek73
Thanks for the advice. I would have to issue you a challenge concerning any computer made by IBM with the Intel 8086 CPU. IBM itself never made a PC with this CPU. When IBM created the original IBM PC and released it in 1981, it used the 8088 due to its 16-bit processing architecture, and 8-bit external data bus. If we recall, 8-bit data bus expansion adapters were more-or-less industry standard, thus less expensive. Similarly, 16-bit adapters were relatively new and more expensive. Because of these factors, IBM did not release a personal computer with a 16-bit data bus until the IBM PC AT, with the Intel 80286 processor engine.