garyfromcanton

Q: I have an iMac that is moving real slow and get's kicked off the internet. I have 2 GB of ram and I am hesitant to run programs that guarantee speed and cleanup. I have an iPad (new) and a new macbook pro running twice the ram. any thoughts?

I have an iMac that is moving real slow and get's kicked off the internet. I have 2 GB of ram and I am hesitant to run programs that guarantee speed and cleanup. I have an iPad (new) and a new macbook pro running twice the ram. any thoughts?

MacBook Pro, Mac OS X (10.7.2)

Posted on Jan 23, 2013 6:11 AM

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Q: I have an iMac that is moving real slow and get's kicked off the internet. I have 2 GB of ram and I am hesitant to run programs th ... more

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  • by WZZZ,

    WZZZ WZZZ Jan 23, 2013 6:17 AM in response to garyfromcanton
    Level 6 (13,112 points)
    Mac OS X
    Jan 23, 2013 6:17 AM in response to garyfromcanton

    What OS is the 2GB RAM iMac running? And stay away from any of those programs, especially MacKeeper.

  • by John Galt,

    John Galt John Galt Jan 23, 2013 6:17 AM in response to garyfromcanton
    Level 9 (50,424 points)
    Mac OS X
    Jan 23, 2013 6:17 AM in response to garyfromcanton

    Do not run any such "cleanup" programs. The only guarantee is that they will cause problems and frustration and are likely to cost you time and money to fix.

     

    Read: OS X Lion: If your Mac runs slowly

     

    If it is only Web browsing that seems to be slower than it used to, that is often the result of such sites becoming ever more demanding of hardware and bandwidth. Short of paying for faster Internet service, buying additional memory, or a faster Mac, there is little you can do to cope with such so-called progress. 

     

    If you are experiencing general slowdowns or "freezes" unrelated to Internet activity, the problem may be related to your computer or the software you installed and is something you may be able to fix, or at least improve. Aside from hardware failures and software that you install, including OS upgrades, there is no reason that your computer should not work precisely the same as it did when it was new.  

     

    Without a more specific description it is difficult to provide specific guidance. Read the following to determine if something may apply to your concern: 

     


     

    General Mac maintenance: Tips to keep your Mac in top form

     

    General purpose Mac troubleshooting guide: Isolating issues in Mac OS X 

     

    Creating a temporary account to isolate user-specific problems: Isolating an issue by using another user account 

     

    Memory limitations: Using Activity Monitor to read System Memory and determine how much RAM is being used 

     

    Identifying resource hogs and other tips: Runaway applications can shorten battery runtime 

     

    To identify potential hardware problems: Apple Hardware Test 

     

    To resolve startup issues and perform disk maintenance, use Disk Utility.

     

    Safe Mode or "Safe Boot" is a troubleshooting mode that bypasses all third party system extensions and loads only required system components.

    Read about it: Starting up in Safe Mode

     

    To repair a potentially corrupt hard disk, so that you may recover its data prior to replacing it, and subsequently reinstall Mac OS X: OS X Recovery (applies only to Lion and later versions of OS X) 

  • by garyfromcanton,

    garyfromcanton garyfromcanton Jan 23, 2013 10:09 AM in response to WZZZ
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Jan 23, 2013 10:09 AM in response to WZZZ

    Software  Mac OS X Lion 10.7.5 (11G63b)

    I have no desire to let rouge cleanup intruders inside my computer. Thanks

  • by MichelPM,

    MichelPM MichelPM Jan 23, 2013 11:37 AM in response to garyfromcanton
    Level 6 (14,279 points)
    iPad
    Jan 23, 2013 11:37 AM in response to garyfromcanton

    What is the year, CPU speed of your iMac?

    2 GBs of RAM is barely enough RAM to run just OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, alone.

    Run additonal applications with OS X and your iMac is going to slow down in performance.

    Every iteration of OS X, especially Intel versions uses more and more CPU, GPU, RAM memory and hard drive resources.

    Without knowing more about your iMac, we can't advise you about how much additonal RAM you need to add to your iMac to help with its performance.

  • by WZZZ,

    WZZZ WZZZ Jan 23, 2013 2:13 PM in response to garyfromcanton
    Level 6 (13,112 points)
    Mac OS X
    Jan 23, 2013 2:13 PM in response to garyfromcanton

    You need more RAM. I couldn't run Snow Leopard very well on only 2GB. 4GB is really the minimum and I have run into trouble with that much. Disregard minimum RAM in Apple's system requirements. It's not realistic.

  • by garyfromcanton,

    garyfromcanton garyfromcanton Jan 23, 2013 5:58 PM in response to MichelPM
    Level 1 (0 points)
    Jan 23, 2013 5:58 PM in response to MichelPM

    living in rural illinois i may find it tough to find someone to upgrade to 4GB ram, but that seems to be the overall consensus. Any thots on where to buy ram? I will find someone in Peoria Illinois to install it. Maybe even 6GB of ram. Apple store? Thanks for your response.

  • by John Galt,

    John Galt John Galt Jan 23, 2013 6:16 PM in response to garyfromcanton
    Level 9 (50,424 points)
    Mac OS X
    Jan 23, 2013 6:16 PM in response to garyfromcanton

    Crucial and OWC / MacSales are recommended vendors for Apple memory. Their prices are very reasonalble.

     

    Installing RAM is considered a do it yourself project. Apple even provides the instructions.