![]() ![]() IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO THE TERMS OF THE LICENSE, YOU MAY RETURN THE APPLE SOFTWARE WITHIN THE RETURN PERIOD TO THE APPLE STORE OR AUTHORIZED DISTRIBUTOR WHERE YOU OBTAINED IT FOR A REFUND, SUBJECT TO APPLE’S RETURN POLICY FOUND AT. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE TO THE TERMS OF THIS LICENSE, DO NOT USE THE APPLE SOFTWARE AND CLICK “DISAGREE”. IF YOU ARE ACCESSING THE APPLE SOFTWARE ELECTRONICALLY, SIGNIFY YOUR AGREEMENT TO BE BOUND BY THE TERMS OF THIS LICENSE BY CLICKING THE "AGREE " BUTTON. BY USING THE APPLE SOFTWARE, YOU ARE AGREEING TO BE BOUND BY THE TERMS OF THIS LICENSE, UNLESS YOU RETURN THE APPLE SOFTWARE IN ACCORDANCE WITH APPLE’S RETURN POLICY. PLEASE READ THIS SOFTWARE LICENSE AGREEMENT ("LICENSE") CAREFULLY BEFORE USING THE APPLE SOFTWARE. Single Use, Family Pack and Leopard Upgrade Licenses for use on Apple-branded Systems Note: One strange thing about the Snow Leopard SLA: the word snow never appears. There is only the requirement for the purchase of a SLA for each actual or virtual simultaneous execution of Snow Leopard. There is nothing in the SLA stating Snow Leopard can not be run virtually. The SLA for Snow Leopard simply states a single Apple-branded computer. In other words, the later SLA's allow for simultaneous executions of the same licensed operating system, as long as the additional executions are in virtual machines.įor example, the SLA for Mavericks contains the word directly in 2.B.(i) which would indicate a non-virtual execution, but 2.B.(iii) then allows for virtual executions. But, these later references are in addition to the requirements for the first installation. I know the SLA for Snow Leopard does not explicitly refer to virtual machines and the SLA for later versions of OS X and macOS do make such references. There is no requirement that the machine be physical or virtual, as long as the physical hardware is Apple. ![]() Snow Leopard will boot and execute using Apple hardware.īasically the SLA requires you run Snow Leopard on only one Apple machine at a time. Here still is only one copy of Snow Leopard installed on the external drive. VirtualBox would then be used to boot from the physical external drive. To be clear, I intend for the OP to leave Snow Leopard on the external drive. There is some controversy regarding whether running Snow Leopard in a VirtualBox virtual machine would violate the SLA. This option might require Snow Leopard be version 10.6.8. This should be either Yosemite or El Capitan. Transferred the file to the 2013 iMac and install the software.Īnother possibility would be to boot to OS X Recovery over the internet and upgrade Snow Leopard to the OS X that was originally installed on your iMac. Use the Disk Utility application on an older Mac with an optical drive to convert the DVD to an ISO or DMG file.Used the software DVD to install to the 2013 iMac. Used the internet to share a optical drive with an older Mac.For example, Adobe has downloads for most of its legacy products. Checked with the software company's website to see if a downloadable installer was now available.To install on my 2013 iMac (which does not have an optical drive), I used one of the following solutions. This software original was in the form of DVD's. However before attempting to use a virtual machine, have you considered installing the crucial software on the 2015 MacBook Air? Most of the software I used, which worked with Snow Leopard, still works with High Sierra. It might be possible to boot the external drive using a Virtual Box machine running on a 2015 MacBook Air. You should not be able to boot the Snow Leopard stored on external drive using 2015 MacBook Air. ![]()
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