![]() Mine was named „OS X Install ESD” since I had it from my previous Mountain Lion bootable drive. Name it at will, but keep a note on this name. ![]() Next, get an 8 GB USB Drive, formatted as Mac OSX Extended (Journaled). For burning a boot DVD you will need a 4.7GB or larger blank DVD and a SuperDrive. Normally, the installation kit should be downloaded under Applications and should be named „Install OS X Mavericks”: After you’ve downloaded the OS X Mountain Lion installer from the Mac App Store, launch LionDiskMaker and it will locate the installer app, extract the disk image, and then make the boot disk. Since creating a bootable media via the classic Disk Utility approach is a bit tricky with Mavericks, I will show you a faster, alternative way to create an USB bootable drive for OS X Mavericks.įirst, you have to download the Mavericks from Apple App Store: OS X Mavericks is available as free update on App Store, but I almost never do updates, I prefer clean installs. ![]() Maybe, Apple, you will fix some of the older „core technologies” too, because today I almost f….ed up an external WD drive, ExFAT formatted on my previous Mountain Lion OS, when this Mavericks gem decided to „nap-my-app” during a file transfer. Quote Apple: „With more than 200 new features, OS X Mavericks brings Maps and iBooks to the Mac, introduces Finder Tabs and Tags, enhances multi-display support and includes an all-new version of Safari.” Cool, ain’t it ? But this I like most: „The latest release of OS X also adds new core technologies that deliver breakthrough power efficiency and responsiveness.” Nice. ![]() Apple released its latest OS X version, 10.9 or „Mavericks”. ![]()
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