Some sample reports from a rapidly growing Apple Discussions thread: However, the facts that literally every report we've received of this problem so far implicates "Upgrade Install," and many users report that going back and performing an Archive and Install or Erase and Install instead solves the issue are telling.Īlso, while (as we've noted for every incremental Tiger update) the first restart can be longer than usual - up to 10 minutes or more in some cases - many users have waited patiently for more than 60 minutes: a strong indicator that something has gone horribly wrong. You could argue that (in theory) most users select "Upgrade Install," hence users reporting problems will cite it. Unsurprisingly, virtually every user reporting this problem used a straight upgrade ("Upgrade Install") rather than performing an Archive and Install or Erase and Install as we previously recommended. This issue is typified by a successful installation, but a persistent blue screen on the subsequent restart, requiring a forced shut down. Hundreds of users are reporting an inability to properly startup after installing Mac OS X 10.5 (Leopard).
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