Finally got up and running with Leopard on my new iMac. A few glitches here and there- such as "insufficient privileges" to install, my G5 which was attached via target mode now being renamed, and G5 info sometimes popping up in various apps. However, both printers and scanner are operational, and I am doing fine. Till today. Was on Norton's site to download Antivirus 11, and the machine froze with a message I needed to restart, that OSX had quit. Couldn't restart - everything was frozen, so I had to use the power button to shut down and start up.
Decided to repair permissions, and got an extraordinary list of items starting with "ACL not expected". What does this mean? It all referred to library items. I have not run it again to see if the list is still there. I never had a kernel panic before, don't know what caused it, and don't know what to look for to avoid this again.
Hoping some of you can address these issues and steer me in the right direction. And...while I'm at it, since SuperDuper is still not functional for Leopard, what do I use to back up to my firewire? Last time I tried Time Machine, I got a message that there was not enough room on the disk- and there was. I have not tried it since.
The kernel panic you experienced is quite common to anyone who uses Norton Antivirus.
Because there are no (that's right, zero) viruses for Macs in the wild, antivirus software is a waste of time and money; software vendors count on people's fear to make them open their wallets and part with cash. Norton Antivirus works to protect your Mac against viruses exactly as well as it works against werewolves, zombies, and vampires.
However, on top of that, there are many well-known, documented bugs in Norton Antivirus. These bugs can cause crashes, freezes, kernel panics, problems with network file copies, corruption of files, and other problems on your Mac. Norton Antivirus is poorly maintained, and on several occasions Symantec has released flawed update files that cause it to wrongly identify harmless files as "viruses." Last year, for example, they released a virus update that caused Norton Antivirus to say that a critical Mac OS system file was a "virus," and people who tried to clean up this "virus" ended up crashing their computers.
And it gets worse. The uninstaller that Symantec provides to remove Norton Antivirus doesn't work.
that will remove Norton Antivirus from your computer.