El Capitan and old Photoshop to bootable partition












2














I have a working copy of Photoshop CS3 on a 2011 MacBook Pro. I would like to put it and an older OS on a bootable partition so I can use the CS3 occasionally and not have to pay monthly fees to Adobe. I am getting a new Mac soon, probably a MacBook Pro, and will want to use the partition with it since the CS3 will not run with newer systems.



I have the DVD's for CS3 and an install DVD for OS 10.5 from the 2011 machine. How do I make sure it is bootable and this system works? Can I use Time Machine to move the CS3 from the 2011 machine or should I use the install disk? Since the OS disk came with a specific laptop, will it work with a new machine as a bootable partition?










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  • 1




    The activation servers for CS3 have been retired; do you have the requisite serial number/installer to install it offline?
    – JMY1000
    Dec 17 at 1:46
















2














I have a working copy of Photoshop CS3 on a 2011 MacBook Pro. I would like to put it and an older OS on a bootable partition so I can use the CS3 occasionally and not have to pay monthly fees to Adobe. I am getting a new Mac soon, probably a MacBook Pro, and will want to use the partition with it since the CS3 will not run with newer systems.



I have the DVD's for CS3 and an install DVD for OS 10.5 from the 2011 machine. How do I make sure it is bootable and this system works? Can I use Time Machine to move the CS3 from the 2011 machine or should I use the install disk? Since the OS disk came with a specific laptop, will it work with a new machine as a bootable partition?










share|improve this question









New contributor




user314246 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
















  • 1




    The activation servers for CS3 have been retired; do you have the requisite serial number/installer to install it offline?
    – JMY1000
    Dec 17 at 1:46














2












2








2







I have a working copy of Photoshop CS3 on a 2011 MacBook Pro. I would like to put it and an older OS on a bootable partition so I can use the CS3 occasionally and not have to pay monthly fees to Adobe. I am getting a new Mac soon, probably a MacBook Pro, and will want to use the partition with it since the CS3 will not run with newer systems.



I have the DVD's for CS3 and an install DVD for OS 10.5 from the 2011 machine. How do I make sure it is bootable and this system works? Can I use Time Machine to move the CS3 from the 2011 machine or should I use the install disk? Since the OS disk came with a specific laptop, will it work with a new machine as a bootable partition?










share|improve this question









New contributor




user314246 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











I have a working copy of Photoshop CS3 on a 2011 MacBook Pro. I would like to put it and an older OS on a bootable partition so I can use the CS3 occasionally and not have to pay monthly fees to Adobe. I am getting a new Mac soon, probably a MacBook Pro, and will want to use the partition with it since the CS3 will not run with newer systems.



I have the DVD's for CS3 and an install DVD for OS 10.5 from the 2011 machine. How do I make sure it is bootable and this system works? Can I use Time Machine to move the CS3 from the 2011 machine or should I use the install disk? Since the OS disk came with a specific laptop, will it work with a new machine as a bootable partition?







macos partition adobe-photoshop






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user314246 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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share|improve this question









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Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Dec 17 at 4:39









Monomeeth

45.5k797137




45.5k797137






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asked Dec 17 at 1:32









user314246

111




111




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New contributor





user314246 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






user314246 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.








  • 1




    The activation servers for CS3 have been retired; do you have the requisite serial number/installer to install it offline?
    – JMY1000
    Dec 17 at 1:46














  • 1




    The activation servers for CS3 have been retired; do you have the requisite serial number/installer to install it offline?
    – JMY1000
    Dec 17 at 1:46








1




1




The activation servers for CS3 have been retired; do you have the requisite serial number/installer to install it offline?
– JMY1000
Dec 17 at 1:46




The activation servers for CS3 have been retired; do you have the requisite serial number/installer to install it offline?
– JMY1000
Dec 17 at 1:46










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















3














Macs very rarely support booting versions of macOS older than the one they shipped with—exceptions are few and far between, and never more than a year's release. This means that, at least on a new machine, partitioning and installing an older version on bare metal is out of the question.



Though CS3 does support Intel Macs without Rosetta, and in theory, the binaries should launch on modern versions of macOS, compatibility with newer versions is... mediocre... at best. There's some info floating around about it, but nothing is really guarenteed to work.



As it stands, your options are basically as follows:




  • Try to get CS3 (or if you want to up your odds, CS6) to work on a modern version of macOS

  • Continue using your old MacBook Pro (or another Mac) exclusively for CS3

  • Run an older version of macOS in a VM and deal with the potential slowdowns/issues associated with it (macOS isn't usually the happiest about running in a VM compared to other OSs.)

  • Use a Photoshop alternative (e.g. Affinity Photo, Pixelmator, etc.)

  • Bite the bullet and pay for CC


I understand that none of these options are really that great; it's something I've struggled with too, personally. However, Adobe gives no other option really.






share|improve this answer































    1














    Just another answer to add to the list of options.



    You could install a Virtual Machine on your new Mac with the appropriate version of macOS and Adobe Photoshop. In terms of virtual machines you have both free and paid options, the best of which are:





    • VirtualBox (free)

    • Parallels Desktop Lite


    • Parallels Desktop (paid)


    • VMware (paid)


    When visiting the above pages the focus is primarily on running Windows on your Mac, but many people use virtual machines to install other versions of macOS as well. This is perfectly okay with Apple so long as the hardware itself is a Mac. In your case you'd be installing an older version of macOS on a virtual machine on your new Mac, and therefore this will not be breaching the software license agreement.



    In summary, you would create a Mac virtual machine, install the old version of Mac OS X onto that, and then install Photoshop CS3 etc within that. Then, whenever you wanted to use the software, you would just launch the virtual machine.



    If you've never used a virtual machine before, I'd probably recommend you try Parallels Desktop Lite as that will probably be easier to set up than VirtualBox.






    share|improve this answer





















    • Ahhhh, I literally just thought of running a VM! You beat me by literal seconds :(
      – JMY1000
      Dec 17 at 2:35










    • One thing to note, if they plan to use macOS 10.5 they will need the server edition (or a VM software that doesn't care about the difference, or a method to bypass detection). macOS 10.7 was the first version to permit virtualization of the non-server versions.
      – Alexander O'Mara
      Dec 17 at 2:51













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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    3














    Macs very rarely support booting versions of macOS older than the one they shipped with—exceptions are few and far between, and never more than a year's release. This means that, at least on a new machine, partitioning and installing an older version on bare metal is out of the question.



    Though CS3 does support Intel Macs without Rosetta, and in theory, the binaries should launch on modern versions of macOS, compatibility with newer versions is... mediocre... at best. There's some info floating around about it, but nothing is really guarenteed to work.



    As it stands, your options are basically as follows:




    • Try to get CS3 (or if you want to up your odds, CS6) to work on a modern version of macOS

    • Continue using your old MacBook Pro (or another Mac) exclusively for CS3

    • Run an older version of macOS in a VM and deal with the potential slowdowns/issues associated with it (macOS isn't usually the happiest about running in a VM compared to other OSs.)

    • Use a Photoshop alternative (e.g. Affinity Photo, Pixelmator, etc.)

    • Bite the bullet and pay for CC


    I understand that none of these options are really that great; it's something I've struggled with too, personally. However, Adobe gives no other option really.






    share|improve this answer




























      3














      Macs very rarely support booting versions of macOS older than the one they shipped with—exceptions are few and far between, and never more than a year's release. This means that, at least on a new machine, partitioning and installing an older version on bare metal is out of the question.



      Though CS3 does support Intel Macs without Rosetta, and in theory, the binaries should launch on modern versions of macOS, compatibility with newer versions is... mediocre... at best. There's some info floating around about it, but nothing is really guarenteed to work.



      As it stands, your options are basically as follows:




      • Try to get CS3 (or if you want to up your odds, CS6) to work on a modern version of macOS

      • Continue using your old MacBook Pro (or another Mac) exclusively for CS3

      • Run an older version of macOS in a VM and deal with the potential slowdowns/issues associated with it (macOS isn't usually the happiest about running in a VM compared to other OSs.)

      • Use a Photoshop alternative (e.g. Affinity Photo, Pixelmator, etc.)

      • Bite the bullet and pay for CC


      I understand that none of these options are really that great; it's something I've struggled with too, personally. However, Adobe gives no other option really.






      share|improve this answer


























        3












        3








        3






        Macs very rarely support booting versions of macOS older than the one they shipped with—exceptions are few and far between, and never more than a year's release. This means that, at least on a new machine, partitioning and installing an older version on bare metal is out of the question.



        Though CS3 does support Intel Macs without Rosetta, and in theory, the binaries should launch on modern versions of macOS, compatibility with newer versions is... mediocre... at best. There's some info floating around about it, but nothing is really guarenteed to work.



        As it stands, your options are basically as follows:




        • Try to get CS3 (or if you want to up your odds, CS6) to work on a modern version of macOS

        • Continue using your old MacBook Pro (or another Mac) exclusively for CS3

        • Run an older version of macOS in a VM and deal with the potential slowdowns/issues associated with it (macOS isn't usually the happiest about running in a VM compared to other OSs.)

        • Use a Photoshop alternative (e.g. Affinity Photo, Pixelmator, etc.)

        • Bite the bullet and pay for CC


        I understand that none of these options are really that great; it's something I've struggled with too, personally. However, Adobe gives no other option really.






        share|improve this answer














        Macs very rarely support booting versions of macOS older than the one they shipped with—exceptions are few and far between, and never more than a year's release. This means that, at least on a new machine, partitioning and installing an older version on bare metal is out of the question.



        Though CS3 does support Intel Macs without Rosetta, and in theory, the binaries should launch on modern versions of macOS, compatibility with newer versions is... mediocre... at best. There's some info floating around about it, but nothing is really guarenteed to work.



        As it stands, your options are basically as follows:




        • Try to get CS3 (or if you want to up your odds, CS6) to work on a modern version of macOS

        • Continue using your old MacBook Pro (or another Mac) exclusively for CS3

        • Run an older version of macOS in a VM and deal with the potential slowdowns/issues associated with it (macOS isn't usually the happiest about running in a VM compared to other OSs.)

        • Use a Photoshop alternative (e.g. Affinity Photo, Pixelmator, etc.)

        • Bite the bullet and pay for CC


        I understand that none of these options are really that great; it's something I've struggled with too, personally. However, Adobe gives no other option really.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Dec 17 at 2:34

























        answered Dec 17 at 2:05









        JMY1000

        3,70221126




        3,70221126

























            1














            Just another answer to add to the list of options.



            You could install a Virtual Machine on your new Mac with the appropriate version of macOS and Adobe Photoshop. In terms of virtual machines you have both free and paid options, the best of which are:





            • VirtualBox (free)

            • Parallels Desktop Lite


            • Parallels Desktop (paid)


            • VMware (paid)


            When visiting the above pages the focus is primarily on running Windows on your Mac, but many people use virtual machines to install other versions of macOS as well. This is perfectly okay with Apple so long as the hardware itself is a Mac. In your case you'd be installing an older version of macOS on a virtual machine on your new Mac, and therefore this will not be breaching the software license agreement.



            In summary, you would create a Mac virtual machine, install the old version of Mac OS X onto that, and then install Photoshop CS3 etc within that. Then, whenever you wanted to use the software, you would just launch the virtual machine.



            If you've never used a virtual machine before, I'd probably recommend you try Parallels Desktop Lite as that will probably be easier to set up than VirtualBox.






            share|improve this answer





















            • Ahhhh, I literally just thought of running a VM! You beat me by literal seconds :(
              – JMY1000
              Dec 17 at 2:35










            • One thing to note, if they plan to use macOS 10.5 they will need the server edition (or a VM software that doesn't care about the difference, or a method to bypass detection). macOS 10.7 was the first version to permit virtualization of the non-server versions.
              – Alexander O'Mara
              Dec 17 at 2:51


















            1














            Just another answer to add to the list of options.



            You could install a Virtual Machine on your new Mac with the appropriate version of macOS and Adobe Photoshop. In terms of virtual machines you have both free and paid options, the best of which are:





            • VirtualBox (free)

            • Parallels Desktop Lite


            • Parallels Desktop (paid)


            • VMware (paid)


            When visiting the above pages the focus is primarily on running Windows on your Mac, but many people use virtual machines to install other versions of macOS as well. This is perfectly okay with Apple so long as the hardware itself is a Mac. In your case you'd be installing an older version of macOS on a virtual machine on your new Mac, and therefore this will not be breaching the software license agreement.



            In summary, you would create a Mac virtual machine, install the old version of Mac OS X onto that, and then install Photoshop CS3 etc within that. Then, whenever you wanted to use the software, you would just launch the virtual machine.



            If you've never used a virtual machine before, I'd probably recommend you try Parallels Desktop Lite as that will probably be easier to set up than VirtualBox.






            share|improve this answer





















            • Ahhhh, I literally just thought of running a VM! You beat me by literal seconds :(
              – JMY1000
              Dec 17 at 2:35










            • One thing to note, if they plan to use macOS 10.5 they will need the server edition (or a VM software that doesn't care about the difference, or a method to bypass detection). macOS 10.7 was the first version to permit virtualization of the non-server versions.
              – Alexander O'Mara
              Dec 17 at 2:51
















            1












            1








            1






            Just another answer to add to the list of options.



            You could install a Virtual Machine on your new Mac with the appropriate version of macOS and Adobe Photoshop. In terms of virtual machines you have both free and paid options, the best of which are:





            • VirtualBox (free)

            • Parallels Desktop Lite


            • Parallels Desktop (paid)


            • VMware (paid)


            When visiting the above pages the focus is primarily on running Windows on your Mac, but many people use virtual machines to install other versions of macOS as well. This is perfectly okay with Apple so long as the hardware itself is a Mac. In your case you'd be installing an older version of macOS on a virtual machine on your new Mac, and therefore this will not be breaching the software license agreement.



            In summary, you would create a Mac virtual machine, install the old version of Mac OS X onto that, and then install Photoshop CS3 etc within that. Then, whenever you wanted to use the software, you would just launch the virtual machine.



            If you've never used a virtual machine before, I'd probably recommend you try Parallels Desktop Lite as that will probably be easier to set up than VirtualBox.






            share|improve this answer












            Just another answer to add to the list of options.



            You could install a Virtual Machine on your new Mac with the appropriate version of macOS and Adobe Photoshop. In terms of virtual machines you have both free and paid options, the best of which are:





            • VirtualBox (free)

            • Parallels Desktop Lite


            • Parallels Desktop (paid)


            • VMware (paid)


            When visiting the above pages the focus is primarily on running Windows on your Mac, but many people use virtual machines to install other versions of macOS as well. This is perfectly okay with Apple so long as the hardware itself is a Mac. In your case you'd be installing an older version of macOS on a virtual machine on your new Mac, and therefore this will not be breaching the software license agreement.



            In summary, you would create a Mac virtual machine, install the old version of Mac OS X onto that, and then install Photoshop CS3 etc within that. Then, whenever you wanted to use the software, you would just launch the virtual machine.



            If you've never used a virtual machine before, I'd probably recommend you try Parallels Desktop Lite as that will probably be easier to set up than VirtualBox.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Dec 17 at 2:33









            Monomeeth

            45.5k797137




            45.5k797137












            • Ahhhh, I literally just thought of running a VM! You beat me by literal seconds :(
              – JMY1000
              Dec 17 at 2:35










            • One thing to note, if they plan to use macOS 10.5 they will need the server edition (or a VM software that doesn't care about the difference, or a method to bypass detection). macOS 10.7 was the first version to permit virtualization of the non-server versions.
              – Alexander O'Mara
              Dec 17 at 2:51




















            • Ahhhh, I literally just thought of running a VM! You beat me by literal seconds :(
              – JMY1000
              Dec 17 at 2:35










            • One thing to note, if they plan to use macOS 10.5 they will need the server edition (or a VM software that doesn't care about the difference, or a method to bypass detection). macOS 10.7 was the first version to permit virtualization of the non-server versions.
              – Alexander O'Mara
              Dec 17 at 2:51


















            Ahhhh, I literally just thought of running a VM! You beat me by literal seconds :(
            – JMY1000
            Dec 17 at 2:35




            Ahhhh, I literally just thought of running a VM! You beat me by literal seconds :(
            – JMY1000
            Dec 17 at 2:35












            One thing to note, if they plan to use macOS 10.5 they will need the server edition (or a VM software that doesn't care about the difference, or a method to bypass detection). macOS 10.7 was the first version to permit virtualization of the non-server versions.
            – Alexander O'Mara
            Dec 17 at 2:51






            One thing to note, if they plan to use macOS 10.5 they will need the server edition (or a VM software that doesn't care about the difference, or a method to bypass detection). macOS 10.7 was the first version to permit virtualization of the non-server versions.
            – Alexander O'Mara
            Dec 17 at 2:51












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