![]() ![]() Leave the Type as “New Image File” and the Location as “Snow Leopard-0.hdd”. Click the + button in the lower left, and choose Hard Disk from the drop down menu.If “Hard Disk 2” is listed in the left column, click it, and then click the – button beneath the column to remove it. Change the name of the VM to “Snow Leopard”. Control-click on the macOS VM in the Parallels Control Center and choose Configure.Part 2: Set up the Snow Leopard installer disc During the initial setup screens, choose Set Up Later (or, on earlier macOS versions, “Don’t Sign In”) for iCloud/Apple ID login, and otherwise defer as much as you can, until you get to the Desktop. The VM should restart automatically (if not, start it manually).Then click on “Macintosh HD”, click Install, and wait until the installation completes. Choose your language, click on (Re)Install macOS, Continue, Continue, Agree, Agree. The VM will initially start into Recovery/Utillities mode.Wait until that’s complete, and on the next screen, leave the default VM name of “macOS”, and the default location (the Parallels foder of your Documents folder). It’s fine to leave the default name (“macOS image file”) and location (the Parallels folder of your Documents folder). ![]() Click Continue, then Continue again to create a bootable disk image file. Drag the Install macOS app into the area that says “Drag the image file here”. To do this, choose File > New in Parallels, and double-click “Install Windows or another OS from a DVD or image file”.
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