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Izis

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jul 18, 2011
14
0
France
Hello,

I'd like to know what's the best way to save my OS X 10.8.4 before trying Yosemite beta.

I think it's Time Machine ? So I make a save on Time Machine, then if I want to go back to Mavericks from Yosemite what will I have to do ? Is it a fast & clean process ?
 

maflynn

macrumors Haswell
May 3, 2009
73,682
43,740
A Cloned image is the best option. Get Carbon Copy Cloner, and then you can clone your recovery partition and main drive.
 

mikecwest

macrumors 65816
Jul 7, 2013
1,193
496
Hello,

I'd like to know what's the best way to save my OS X 10.8.4 before trying Yosemite beta.

I think it's Time Machine ? So I make a save on Time Machine, then if I want to go back to Mavericks from Yosemite what will I have to do ? Is it a fast & clean process ?

Just so that you know, 10.8.4 is *NOT* Mavericks, it is Mountain Lion or ML as some call it. An installation of Mavericks will be 10.9.X.

If you are trying to save 10.8.4 (Mountain Lion), the backup procedure would still be the same.
 

zorinlynx

macrumors G3
May 31, 2007
8,347
18,564
Florida, USA
My current recommendation if you want to play with Yosemite is to install it to an external USB drive.

This way you can leave your current system alone and not have to worry about breaking anything. Heck, if your main system drive is encrypted, you don't even have to give Yosemite access to it at all.

I've been doing this on my laptop, testing Yosemite running off a Sandisk Extreme USB 3.0 32GB flash drive. It actually runs nearly as fast as Mavericks from the internal SSD!
 

Weaselboy

Moderator
Staff member
Jan 23, 2005
34,463
16,160
California
I think it's Time Machine ? So I make a save on Time Machine, then if I want to go back to Mavericks from Yosemite what will I have to do ? Is it a fast & clean process ?

Time Machine will work just fine for this. Just make a good TM backup and set it aside. Then if you want to go back just option key boot to the TM disk and you will get a recovery screen. From there use Disk Util to erase the entire disk then click restore. Done.
 
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