Advertisement
I have a 24" iMac. I bought it maybe a year and a half ago. When I bought it, the first thing I did was install the maximum amount of RAM it would take (at least that's my understanding). But Jesus Christ this thing is slow!! If I click on the menu bar for Finder or whatever program I'm running, it can take a good five seconds before the drop-down menu will pop up. Then I can slide over maybe five or six menu items that pop up instantly, then when I hover over the next one, it will take another five seconds before the drop-down menu will display. When I'm scrolling through something, I can get through several lines or maybe a screen, and then it will freeze for maybe five seconds before it resumes scrolling. The same thing when I'm just typing text into a window (like this one). A couple/few times a minute, the typing will just freeze for a few seconds, then a bunch of letters will appear all at once. And God help me if I'm actually trying to click on web links. Of course, nearly every time any of these things happen, I get the rotating rainbow circle telling me that it's *trying* to do something. It just can't do it fast enough. It's WAY slower than any of my crappy old Windows laptops. It feels like it's always grinding along, never able to keep up with even the simplest tasks. Is there anything I can do about this? Do I need to defrag my hard drive or something? What the hell is going on???
Here's my hardware info:
Model Name: iMac
Model Identifier: iMac7,1
Processor Name: Intel Core 2 Duo
Processor Speed: 2.4 GHz
Number Of Processors: 1
Total Number Of Cores: 2
L2 Cache: 4 MB
Memory: 4 GB
Bus Speed: 800 MHz
Boot ROM Version: IM71.007A.B03
SMC Version: 1.21f4
Any thoughts, anyone?
Here's my hardware info:
Model Name: iMac
Model Identifier: iMac7,1
Processor Name: Intel Core 2 Duo
Processor Speed: 2.4 GHz
Number Of Processors: 1
Total Number Of Cores: 2
L2 Cache: 4 MB
Memory: 4 GB
Bus Speed: 800 MHz
Boot ROM Version: IM71.007A.B03
SMC Version: 1.21f4
Any thoughts, anyone?
Advertisement
Advertisement
-
Re: SLOW
Mon, June 15, 2009 - 8:38 AMCould be there's something running in the background keeping the CPU busy. Could also be a sign of the harddrive starting to go bad.
You can check for a bad disk with Disk Warrior, which is very thorough but commercial, or with something like SMARTReporter ( www.corecode.at/smartreporter/ ), which will only give you a bare-bone condition of the disk and may not catch everything.
Did you load any software before it started acting this way? Anti-virus or a device driver "suite" (HP has a bad habit of that)?
That system should certainly be speedy!
-
Re: SLOW
Mon, June 15, 2009 - 8:55 AMDownload Onyx and use that. Also, a hard drive more than 50% full on a Mac will be slow, from personal experience. Also, my PPC slowed way down after I used Time Machine. Won't make that mistake again after I do the clean install. -
-
Re: SLOW
Mon, June 15, 2009 - 9:55 AM"Could be there's something running in the background keeping the CPU busy.
Did you load any software before it started acting this way?"
"Also, my PPC slowed way down after I used Time Machine."
Uh oh.
Dammit, I bet that's it.
I don't particularly recall *not* having this problem before I started running Time Machine, but I don't particularly recall *having* it, either, and this seems like the sort of thing I would have noticed.
Okay, so let's say that the problem *is* Time Machine... I don't even have the external hard drive attached to the iMac at the moment. Is there any way to disable whatever processing Time Machine is doing in the background when I'm not actually trying to use it? I may only want/need to hook up the hard drive and do a backup a couple of times a month. I don't want Time Machine doing all its overhead crap in the meantime.
Thanks so much, guys. :) -
-
Re: SLOW
Tue, June 23, 2009 - 10:37 PMI'm not sure; I haven't used Time Machine and turned it off on my Leopard install.
I would believe that you can have TM auto-processing turned off, and run it only when you want to do a backup on-the-spot. It's possible TM's default mode is to backup continuously, while the system is running. That would add a bunch of overhead.
-
-
-
Re: SLOW
Wed, June 24, 2009 - 9:53 PMHave you been doing regular maintenance?
Like: Cocktail, Onyx, MacJanitor or TinkerTool SysteM?
-
-
Re: SLOW
Thu, June 25, 2009 - 12:38 PMit's her wi fi
they daisy chain the Linksys® transceivers in your neighborhood then they all slow down together in unison
they = Verizon® , Comcast® , Dish® , your local I S P ® , etc
use Network Utility to determine how many there are around
www.dslreports.com
the fact of the matter is that unless you are using true fibre optic from your 'puter ( or a Touch® or an iPhone® ) , the company cpmputer , or dual I S D N maybe
the fastest that land line copper wire can physically carry your signal is ≠ 56 k , even with all the fancy compression decompression schemes available to Winblows users
Ever heard the expression , ' the last mile ' ? That's what slows connections down
the 2 0 0 metre connection between the house phone land line and the street ( presuming that's anyone's problem )
h t h Ω -
-
Re: SLOW
Fri, June 26, 2009 - 1:41 AMThe WiFi makes the Finder slow?
- okay - tell us what you do to make it work! -
-
Re: SLOW
Fri, June 26, 2009 - 5:21 PMNo , l o l
You don't even need the Finder or the old Multi Finder
it's just a program after all
You can run a Mac® without the Finder application very well these days
Finder never really found any thing n e way :)
∞
www.esm.psu.edu/Faculty/Gr...le-ads.html
-
-
Re: SLOW
Sun, June 28, 2009 - 7:15 PMI'm sorry I haven't responded to any of this, but I had a traumatic experience where the Apple support person talked me into re-installing the operating system (yes, I really should know better by now), and I couldn't bear dealing with the situation for over a week. Anyway, I'm trying to get my system back from Time Machine, but a couple of hours ago I was talking to another (much better) Apple support person, and she said that I should actually take it in and have it looked at by a technician. The problem was still happening after I re-installed the operating system from scratch. (I did the scan disk thing and it says there are no errors on the drive.) It was even happening when we booted off the installation CD. She said that it could be a logic board, or... some other techie-sounding thing that I can't remember. So I figure that's what I'll do.
Thanks so much for all of your help, everyone. :) -
-
Re: SLOW
Mon, June 29, 2009 - 2:22 PMy v w Enrika
You should try talking to A T & T about the iPhone® some day
and humans are analog devices
∞
-
-
-
-
-