No I tried that first thinking it was like what I had read about in 10.7. What you do now is hold CMD + R during reboot and follow the prompts to repair or reinstall the OS. I think there are three choices and I picked the one that seemed like a clean install although it didn't really behave like one. It left the original user I had created and it left firefox in the applications folder, which was the only app I had installed on the new computer. It did lose the icon for firefox on the dock. During part of the process I had to rejoin my home wifi but after that it remembered it for the several reboots. I'm not sure how you would go about wiping the internal drive completely and starting from scratch. There must be a way. I'll have to do more research on that but for now it looks like the most viable method would be a carbon copy clone or Time Machine backup or something similar. I hope there an ability to boot off whatever restore/network/partition thingy in case of emergency. Oh well just what I need is more googling for something that could be done with an emergency DVD or OS DVD. One step forward and two reboots back in my book.
--- In Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com, electropura212 wrote:
>
> If you hold down option during boot, do you not have a recovery partition?
>
> On Sunday, March 3, 2013, johnrobmoore wrote:
>
> > **
> >
> >
> > To follow up the process took from approx 8:45pm to 1:30am before the
> > restart and then a half hour to install the OS. However after it was all
> > done my errant user still existed so I guess it's not a complete reinstall.
> > I then deleted the user after creating a different admin and then remade my
> > user of choice with matching name and password. This seems different than
> > the restore from 10.7 where I thought you could choose the restore
> > partition in disk utility IIRC. After a 5 hour download and restart the
> > computer then went into OS install mode like with a DVD but as I said it
> > didn't appear to be a complete clean install because my initial user was
> > still there. I can see that might be by design but then how do you wipe a
> > drive clean and start completely fresh? Am I missing something?
> >
> > --- In Avid-L2@yahoogroups.com
> 'Avid-L2%40yahoogroups.com');>, John Moore wrote:
> > >
> > > Setting up a new iMac and I wanted to keep the log in simple but I
> > realized after the initial name and password I gave the computer I wanted
> > the name and the password to be the same. I'm not worried about security
> > at home so I went to set up a new user with the name that matched the
> > password I already used. I get errors about the name already being in
> > use. Oh well I'm sure someone knows how to rework that but I figured I
> > should take the opportunity to test out the new OS Restore feature. Or
> > should I say the new curse. I started it and it's telling me the restore
> > is going to take 7 hours and 41 minutes. WTF? I am supposed to get up to
> > 3Mbps and I just ran a speed test that came in at 1.7Mbps but the OS
> > restore is going so I figure that's probably taking up some of the
> > bandwidth. At any rate almost 8 hours to restore the OS!! This seems
> > ridiculous. I haven't done much googling on this but I didn't find any
> > cheats like the script for OS
> > > 10.7 that allowed the OS update to be stored on a flash drive. Does
> > anyone know of such a beast for 10.8.2 which is what this new iMac 21inch
> > came with? The lack of the ability to have an OS restore/emergency disk or
> > even partition that doesn't require a download of such extreme length is
> > inconceivable to me, but what do I know. If the system wasn't brand new
> > out of the box I'd definitely see how I could delete the errant user name I
> > created and get the name to match the password I want but for the sake of
> > experience I'm going to let this thing run it's course. Perhaps the time
> > estimate will change along the way but right now I'm shocked.
> > >
> > > John Moore
> > >
> > > Barking Trout Productions
> > >
> > > Studio City, CA
> > >
> > > bigfish@
> > >
> > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> > >
> >
> >
> >
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
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