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restore from time machine to solve speed issues?

I bought a brand new studio M1 when they came out to replace my mid 2015 iMac 27" and used migration assistant to move everything over. the hope was that my silicone native CAD software would run faster and smoother on this vastly superior machine. not so. quite disappointed, there is hardly any difference at all. 3D rendering is faster for sure, but i'm still plagued by one main issue, among others, a spinning beach ball, when i save the projects. it's best practice to constantly save the work as you go and every time i do, i get the spinning beach ball for about 2 sec. my old machine did the same thing. this is not the behaviour others running the same software on the same machines are experiencing. everyone else on the CAD forums have said they've seen great performance improvements with the studio. it's been suggested that i've brought the issues over with the migration. i thought i wanted to do a clean install and manually bring my stuff over, but others here say that's asking for trouble. is restoring from time machine not the exact same thing? won't i just be bringing the problems right back over again? i don't mind reinstalling all my third party software manually, but i really don't want to risk losing passwords, photos, music, etc. what's the best way to basically restore my machine to new and get only my personal info and prefs moved over, while hopefully leaving behind the gremlins causing my performance issues?

ps. a friend of mine has the same machine with the same build, so i installed the CAD software on it and opened a project of mine from a thumb drive and his machine performed better and didn't have the spinning beach ball issue. so there.


Mac Studio

Posted on Apr 11, 2024 10:50 AM

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6 replies

Apr 11, 2024 1:11 PM in response to wildernessbob

Consider downloading and running this little "discovery" utility, Etrecheck. It changes NOTHING. Etrecheck was developed by senior contributor here, and uses system calls to collect often-needed information.


it contains little tests for speeds of devices, CPU utilization, memory usage, energy usage and a digest of recent problems, in one easy to use package. it does not even need to be Installed. Because less can be learned when your Mac is running great, best time to run is when your problems are actually occurring, if possible.


if you follow the directions faithfully, its report (pre-laundered of all personally-identifiable information) can be "Shared" to the system ClipBoard, then Pasted into an ‘Additional Text’ window in a reply on the forums.


How to use Etrecheck pro for free

http://etrecheck.com



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Apr 11, 2024 11:15 AM in response to wildernessbob

By far the easiest way to cause poor performance, instability, overheating and crashing is to install ANY third-party speeder-uppers, Cleaners, Optimizers, or Virus scanners. or a VPN that you installed yourself. The main reason is that they are relentless in scanning your files, non-stop, looking for virus-like patterns in Everything. When completed, they do it all again.


¿Are you running anything even vaguely resembling that?

Apr 11, 2024 12:03 PM in response to wildernessbob

though i just opened activity monitor and noticed that my CAD software, which is sitting idle, haven't touched it for almost an hour, is using 34% CPU. how is that possible? literally just sitting there. there are about 50 processes running at the moment, all "idle" except for me typing on this forum, (this forum on Safari is using 10%) the CAD is the only one in double digits. the vast majority of the active stuff is sitting at 0%

restore from time machine to solve speed issues?

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