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Macbook Pro 10.6.8 won't shut down. Blue screen with spinning wheel.

it's an 15 inch macbook pro. since I bought this computer was working fine about last year. Somehow, start of this year, the problem begins. Everytime when i opened microsoft word 2011 on mac or Photoshop cs5, and quit the software as normaly. When i try to shut down the blue screen with spinning wheel apears. this spining wheel is endless. But funny thing is that after use other software such as games, web browser (safari) etc. and quit them. when i shut down there was not a problem. only word 2011 for mac and adobe photoshop cs5. Any solutions?

MacBook Pro, Mac OS X (10.6.8)

Posted on Jun 10, 2012 5:24 PM

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7 replies

Jun 10, 2012 5:41 PM in response to Alpha X

Hi ...


How much free space on the startup disk?


Right or control click the MacintoshHD icon on your Desktop.


Click Get Info. In the Get Info window you will see Capacity and Available. Make sure there's a minimum of 15% free disk space.



adobe photoshop cs5. Any solutions?



If there's plenty of free space on the startup disk, Photoshop can be RAM (memory) intensive meaning it requires a lot of RAM to run.


Click your Apple menu icon top left in your screen. From the drop down menu click About This Mac then click More Info. That should prompt the System Profiler. See: Memory on the left. If you see less than 3GB, then you might want to consider upgrading the RAM.


You can do this yourself. Crucial has a scanner tool you can use online > SDRAM, DDR2 and DDR RAM memory upgrades from Crucial.com


MacBook: How to remove or install memory




Jun 10, 2012 5:45 PM in response to Alpha X

Ok.. how about memory? See my previous post...


If RAM is not an issue, the startup disk may need repairing.


Launch Disk Utility located in /Applications/Utilities


Select the startup disk on the left then select First Aid.


Click Verify, if necessary, click Repair. You will need your Mac install disc to repair the startup disk.


Using Disk Utility to verify or repair disks

Jun 10, 2012 7:15 PM in response to Alpha X

Launch the Console application in any of the following ways:


Enter the first few letters of its name into a Spotlight search. Select it in the results (it should be at the top.)


In the Finder, select Go Utilities from the menu bar, or press the key combination shift-command-U. The application is in the folder that opens.


If you’re running Mac OS X 10.7 or later, open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Console in the page that opens.


Step 1


Select "system.log" from the file list. Enter "BOOT_TIME" (without the quotes) in the search box. Note the timestamps of those log messages, which refer to the times when the system was booted. Now clear the search box and scroll back in the log to the last boot time when you had the problem. Post the messages logged during the time something abnormal was happening. That time might be before or after the boot.


For example, if the problem is a slow startup taking three minutes, post the messages timestamped within three minutes after the boot time, not before. If the problem is a system crash or freeze, post the messages from before the boot time, when the system was about to crash or was failing to shut down. In either case, please include the BOOT_TIME message at the beginning or the end of the log extract.


Post the log text, please, not a screenshot. If there are runs of repeated messages, post only one example of each. Don’t post many repetitions of the same message.


If the log doesn't go back far enough in time, scroll down in the Console file list to /private/var/log/system.log.0.bz2. Search that archived log, and if necessary the older ones below it, for the same information.


Important: Some private information, such as your name, may appear in the log. Edit it out by search-and-replace in a text editor before posting.


Step 2


Do the same with kernel.log.


Step 3


Still in Console, look under System Diagnostic Reports for crash or panic logs, and post the most recent one, if any. In the interest of privacy, I suggest you edit out the “Anonymous UUID,” a long string of letters, numbers, and dashes in the header of the report, if present (it may not be.) Pleasedon’t post shutdownStall or hang logs — they're very long and not helpful.

Macbook Pro 10.6.8 won't shut down. Blue screen with spinning wheel.

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