Beach Pong Mac OS

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Think of your Mac like your own brain. The more you're worrying about, thinking about, and working on solving – the slower you'll be to respond (and the more annoyed you'll be) when someone asks you to do something else RIGHT NOW. 😉

Below are five options to make the beach ball go away. (Update Nov 21st 2018: New Macinhome YouTube video 'why is my Mac so slow?! The top 12 reasons and fixes!' is live!)

1. Quit some apps.

Brain blast mac os. Hold command and press tab a few times to see which apps are open, and switch between them. When you land on one you want to quit, keep holding command and press q. If you have an unfinished document, don't worry. It'll warn you and ask you to save before quitting it.

Imagine if we could do that with our worries and stresses. Just hit command-q! Ahhhhh. Relief!

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2. Look in Activity Monitor.

Press command-spacebar to open Spotlight and type 'Activity'. Press return to launch Activity Monitor. Look for anything that is using more than 10% of the CPU; that MAY be your culprit. If you know what it is and you don't need it anymore, quit it. If you don't know what it is, call us for help or put on your daredevil mask, hit Google, and get adventurous.

Mac Os Versions

Basically, keeping your Mac clean and healthy is the only sure-fire way to get rid of the Spinning Beach Ball of Death (SBBOD). Many Mac owners treat it as the cause of some larger problem. But it is not actually true. The beach ball is a symptom of the 'disease,' and you should know the primary cause(s) to fix it properly and on time. Stop Spotlight Stalling & Beachballs When Searched in Mac OS X with External Drives Oct 26, 2015 - 23 Comments Spotlight is the lightning fast search engine built into the Mac, but some users may have noticed that once Spotlight has been summoned and a file search query is beginning to be typed, OS X freezes up, stalls, and beachballs for.

3. Restart.

This sounds cliché and very obvious but many people run their Mac for days without restarting. I recommend restarting every 2-3 days for most people or daily if you are doing a lot of multi-tasking with big apps. It's like a cat nap for your Mac. There's a lot going on behind the scenes if you use your Mac a lot, and some things don't stop until you restart. Broken shrines - tojam 13 mac os.

4. Close browser tabs.

If you have Safari and Chrome open with a lot of tabs, that can slow things down a lot. Close any tabs you aren't using anymore with command-w. Hecates revenge mac os. Keep your Mac and your apps running lean.

5. Install RAM or an SSD.

If all else fails you can find out what it will take to upgrade your Mac hardware with more memory (RAM) or a much faster SSD hard drive (solid state drive, also known as flash storage). Here's a video example of the speed comparison, with creepy music. Two identical Macs; one with the regular hard drive and one with the SSD installed: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X8aFwh3dT_E

Beach Pong Mac Os Download

If you want help just reach out.





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