04-22-2008, 04:44 PM
The problem is not Leopard, 10.5.1 or 10.5.2, but your Mac. You have 3rd party stuff on there that interferes with Leo.
You need to have 10.5.2 on there without the other stuff, and then add it one app at a time until something breaks. It will be the 3rd party app that breaks Leo, not the other way around.
I have a G4, a MB core duo, and an Intel iMac 2.8 all running Leopard just fine, and I use 3rd party apps on all 3.
If you insist in adding that stuff, you had better have a current, bootable, working backup to use when you do software updates. Otherwise you will just repeat your existing condition, and wonder why it happened again.
If you bump your head and find it hurts, do you expect a different result the next time you bump your head?
You need to have 10.5.2 on there without the other stuff, and then add it one app at a time until something breaks. It will be the 3rd party app that breaks Leo, not the other way around.
I have a G4, a MB core duo, and an Intel iMac 2.8 all running Leopard just fine, and I use 3rd party apps on all 3.
If you insist in adding that stuff, you had better have a current, bootable, working backup to use when you do software updates. Otherwise you will just repeat your existing condition, and wonder why it happened again.
If you bump your head and find it hurts, do you expect a different result the next time you bump your head?