Snow Leopard 10.6.8 On Lenovo G770 i5 Sandy Bridge Laptop

2. Using Chameleon boot loader to boot to windows 7 or Mac OS X (keep factory windows 7 software).

A. A, B, C above

B. Remove the hard drive, put it on a usb external adapter. I would do this if installing chameleon boot loader on partition 200MB works, I tried fix boot0:error with all possible ways described on the internet and none of them would work with this LAPTOP.

lenovo boot0 error lenovo boot0 error

C. Use external USB Mac OS X: format 200MB partition 1 (MBR) to Journaled Extended and install Multibeast 3.8 on it, copy my “Extra” folder over the multibeast “Extra” folder. Test by reboot from the usb main hard drive to see if it boots to Tony boot menu. If it does, then put it back in the laptop. DONE.

lenovo erase 200mb windows MBR partition lenovo create chameleon partition over windows MBR

Install “easybeast” to “chameleon”

lenovo install easybeast to chameleon partition lenovo copy "Extra" folder over "chameleon/Extra" folder

When everything is done, test by boot with this usb external hard drive to make sure it does boot to chameleon (multibeast) and windows7 and mac osx working. Put the hard drive back to the Laptop and enjoy the solid dual boot. This is the way I use my LAPTOP.

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60 Comments

  • Dog, great tutorial and videos. Before I give this a shot, I wanted to ask a few questions to make sure that this will work well for me:

    1) Will this setup (once completed via dual boot option #2) be capable of using MacOSX’s Software Update utility to install future Snow leopard OSX updates, or will I have to stay at 10.6.8? (It’s no big deal, just curious if future updates for either Snow Leopard and/or Lion will require additional work to install on the laptop).

    2) Is there any special tricks to backing up the dual boot system so that I can easily restore the entire setup without repeating all the steps again? In addition, would a single boot (MacOSX only) simplify the backup/restore significantly?
    FWIW, I would like to use continue to use SuperDuper for my full backup/restores, and TimeMachine for my incremental ones… I am not opposed to using other software if necessary, mainly curious if superDuper would/should work for full backups/restores.
    NOTE: My main concern is to have a simple restore solution in case the hard drive fails, be SUperDuper or some other package you recommend. I figure it’s important to know before starting since HDD manufacturer’s don’t make ’em like they used to 😉

    3) Speaking of HDD failures, is this setup at all tied to the WDD 750GB drive? For example would I be able to upgrade to an SSD or hybrid in the future by doing a simple restore (sort of tied to question 2 in a way).

    Thanks in advance, and again, great job on the tutorial.

    • 1) Will this setup (once completed via dual boot option #2) be capable of using MacOSX’s Software Update utility to install future Snow leopard OSX updates, or will I have to stay at 10.6.8? (It’s no big deal, just curious if future updates for either Snow Leopard and/or Lion will require additional work to install on the laptop).

      I believe Snow Leopard ends @10.6.8, Lion is the new operating system and it doesn’t upgrade with hackintosh at all because we have to buy the OS @29$ on line.

      2) Is there any special tricks to backing up the dual boot system so that I can easily restore the entire setup without repeating all the steps again? In addition, would a single boot (MacOSX only) simplify the backup/restore significantly?

      Very good question, I haven’t thought of this yet, I backed up the hard drive BEFORE the Mac OS X installation using Windows 7 image back up. It doesn’t work after we installed Chameleon over the MBR. The best is to try Tom’s dual boot with Easybcd (which does keep the windows MBR), back up the windows images only.

      3) Speaking of HDD failures, is this setup at all tied to the WDD 750GB drive? For example would I be able to upgrade to an SSD or hybrid in the future by doing a simple restore (sort of tied to question 2 in a way).

      This set up is for all Hard drives, but WDC750 seems to be the most problem ones. SSD, I have no idea.

      I you install LION, it will upgrades well without doing anything, the only problem you will have is the AppleHDA.kext that needs to be removed before reboot for the VoodooHDA.kext to work.

      It’s good that you do research before messing with the original Hard drive. That’s why I strongly recommend to install Mac OS X onto an EXTERNAL USB HARD DRIVE and back up all original Hard drive images.

  • Hi,

    I have used this process, your process and it works great. There is one thing I noticed. Random crashes. Where I will just have to reboot. Strangely enough, i found these only happen when i use the Ethernet port. With wireless, it is rock solid. Is it possible i need a kext other than what you have here?

    Thanks a lot.

    • Hello,
      I haven’t used ethernet much to connect to the internet so I don’t notice the crashes. If the ethernet works, the kext you’re using is correct, when it crashes, it’s the software you’re running. Why not Lion?
      Cheers,

    • Hi,

      I am looking at your lion install and have created the bootable usb. Using LION 10.7.2 and MY Hack. But some of the instructions on what to do with the extra folder is confusing.

      Also, I understand what you are saying about the kext. But I have been doing heavy multitasking and copying large files to and fro across the lan using wireless with 0 crashes. If I connect via Ethernet, then start a transfer across the LAN and say, browse the web. It will crash. I didn’t believe the results either.

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