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Macbook Air 11 Late 2010 - Slow start up times

I used to have a start up time of around 10-15 seconds with my mb air (11 inch 4gb ram core 2 duo 1.6 128gb SS). Now, it takes 40-50 seconds to fully load it.

I've done the ff

1) verified and fixed permisions
2) used clean my mac
3) used onyx
4) ensured that my hard drive is the start up drive ( start up disk)

macbook air 11, Mac OS X (10.6.6)

Posted on Jan 22, 2011 12:17 PM

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Posted on Jan 22, 2011 12:49 PM

Startup time will be affected by any login items (Accounts prefs) as well as any other third-party items that load at startup via launch agents or daemons. Since you say you are booting form "my hard drive" it sounds like you are using an external HDD for startup rather than the SSD. This will also slow startup time.
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Jan 22, 2011 12:49 PM in response to raprafrap

Startup time will be affected by any login items (Accounts prefs) as well as any other third-party items that load at startup via launch agents or daemons. Since you say you are booting form "my hard drive" it sounds like you are using an external HDD for startup rather than the SSD. This will also slow startup time.

Feb 5, 2011 10:47 AM in response to raprafrap

oh waw i noticed the same exact thing, and i have done all the recommended typical procedures. Out of no where it just slowed down.

I spent an hour with a representative only for him to tell me it is out of return period and i have to take it to the genius bar 😟

My main concern is this, if this is an ssd typical performance degradation issue, how the heck is this thing going to perform in 2 years when we already tripled our boot time in less than a month !

and i was so excited too about my first mac 😟 total dream crusher

Feb 5, 2011 11:52 AM in response to joe air

Safe boot always takes longer because it checks the drive, clears caches, etc. Perhaps using Snow Leopard Cache Cleaner to clear out all your user, system, and font caches will help. As will doing this:

Repair the Hard Drive and Permissions

Boot from your OS X Installer disc. After the installer loads select your language and click on the Continue button. When the menu bar appears select Disk Utility from the Utilities menu. After DU loads select your hard drive entry (mfgr.'s ID and drive size) from the the left side list. In the DU status area you will see an entry for the S.M.A.R.T. status of the hard drive. If it does not say "Verified" then the hard drive is failing or failed. (SMART status is not reported on external Firewire or USB drives.) If the drive is "Verified" then select your OS X volume from the list on the left (sub-entry below the drive entry,) click on the First Aid tab, then click on the Repair Disk button. If DU reports any errors that have been fixed, then re-run Repair Disk until no errors are reported. If no errors are reported click on the Repair Permissions button. Wait until the operation completes, then quit DU and return to the installer. Now restart normally.
If DU reports errors it cannot fix, then you will need Disk Warrior and/or Tech Tool Pro to repair the drive. If you don't have either of them or if neither of them can fix the drive, then you will need to reformat the drive and reinstall OS X.

Feb 5, 2011 2:23 PM in response to Kappy

I did everything mentioned and nothing.
I do recall zero out my hard drive right before this started happening , then i saw in one of the forums that his laptop became a lot slower also after he had done that.
I wonder if it is related.
Btw i verified and repaired permissions , cleared the nram and smc, cleared out caches , daemons, restarted 50 million times , verified and repaired hd, checked on start up items and started in safe mode and rebooted again 50 million times. checked username automatic log in , so genius bar then .

Macbook Air 11 Late 2010 - Slow start up times

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