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Like an idiot, I allowed Software Update to install Security Update 2009-001 without doing a backup first
Of course, my MacBook then wouldn't boot.
Much Googling followed. I hooked it up to my PowerMac in Target Disk mode (this allows you to mount the laptop hard drive as a disk on another machine) and tried deleting various cached OS files and a few other dodges, but none of them worked.
Finally, I downloaded the standalone installer for the update, and although it was for an Intel Mac, it ran on the PowerPC PowerMac, noticed that the FireWire disk was a bootable Intel volume, and installed itself onto it (with my permission, of course).
Like an idiot, I allowed Software Update to install Security Update 2009-001 without doing a backup first
Of course, my MacBook then wouldn't boot.
Much Googling followed. I hooked it up to my PowerMac in Target Disk mode (this allows you to mount the laptop hard drive as a disk on another machine) and tried deleting various cached OS files and a few other dodges, but none of them worked.
Finally, I downloaded the standalone installer for the update, and although it was for an Intel Mac, it ran on the PowerPC PowerMac, noticed that the FireWire disk was a bootable Intel volume, and installed itself onto it (with my permission, of course).
Fixed!
I think I ought to do a backup now
Interesting that even the best of us can be caught out occasionally. A lesson for us all there......
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