FlyerTalk Forums - View Single Post - MacBook woes and the spinning beach ball of death
Old Mar 25, 2012 | 10:23 am
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Uncle Dave
10 Years on Site
 
Join Date: Sep 2010
Posts: 137
Originally Posted by JohnnyColombia
Last time I went away a couple of weeks ago I left my MacBook at home and when I got back it seemed to not be working as it did previously.

I have had a look at some "speed up my Mac" type pages on the web, cleared caches, downloaded OnyX and run it, cleared surplus icons off the desktop, repaired disk permissions and it still isn't running as it did before I went away.

According to activity monitor, my CPU usage is less than 10% and I have half my memory free.

kernel_task is swallowing a lot of memory, tabs in browsers seem to be consuming a lot too, and if I import a week's worth of photos into Lightroom then that swallows up a GB too.

None of my usage has changed but before I went away I could chirpily have MS Word, MS Excel, Lightroom, Illustrator and Photoshop all open at the same time as well as 6 or 7 tabs open in each of Chrome and Firefox. Now I cannot do half of that without hanging and getting the beach ball.

The only software that updated itself before I went away was Firefox, but using Safari instead doesn't seem to have solved the problem.

Anyone got any tips or am I resigned to buying more memory? I have 4GB but like I said it was plenty before I went away for a couple of days 2 weeks ago
Couple things...

How old a machine?
What OS?
How full a drive?
How many RPM is your HD? (this makes a BIG difference in certain things)
Have you ever defragged the drive?

More ram is almost always helpfull- are you running istat?

Your system could be running an index and with a full hard drive this can take quite a while and consume many resources. Look for "MDworker" in your list of running programs. After it indexing everything though your should drop down to 90-100 cpu availability.

As you update program after program the load on your machine increases.
So over time your baseload on the machine rises more and more until the machines availability is just too low to be useful.


Uncle Dave
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