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- Nov 27, 2004
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Yet another reason why it's good practice to create a full backup before doing any major system changes, especially when that change is an upgrade to a nascent OS.
With external storage being relatively inexpensive these days, it's hard to have sympathy for folks who treat such upgrades with callous disregard.
Yet another reason why it's good practice to create a full backup before doing any major system changes, especially when that change is an upgrade to a nascent OS.
With external storage being relatively inexpensive these days, it's hard to have sympathy for folks who treat such upgrades with callous disregard.
You can't blame the consumers for this. People expect things to work and Snow Leopard doesn't work properly. Apple screwed up and they shouldn't have done.
Of-course, it's still a good idea to backup just in case but that doesn't mean problems like this should occur.
You guys are scaring me now. There is a chance I could be getting a brand new Mac with SL, and reading some of the issues that are out there, it makes me want to cringe, which makes me want to downgrade it to L if I do get it. Unless I'm mistaken about it, which I heard Mac's purchased between this past June and Dec. 26, 09 have a chance to be upgraded to SL. Someone here know the full truth behind that?
Agreed. In all my reading since this Guest account bug has been reported, it was on macs upgraded from 10.5 to 10.6. Fresh installs of 10.6 (Erase and Install) don't seem to have the issue.
These bugs could have been avoided with proper testing.
And Snow Leopard had few new big features and was supposed to make OSX faster and more stable. It seems ridiculous that serious bugs have been introduced.