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My Macbook Pro is at a "death crawl" pace, and I'm a hundred miles away from an Apple Store!

Please help! All of a sudden, my Macbook Pro has slowed to a death crawl. I downloaded and installed OS X 10.8.3 but it was running pefectly fine for about 3 weeks. But after I downloaded and tried to install the latest safari update (my computer ran out of bettery and shut down before I could finish installing) my computer has slowed down to an excrutiating pace. It starts up very very slow and I constantly get the spinning beach ball, even to close an application or type. I tried starting in safe mode, clearing my cache, running system repair, checking my RAM and CPU usage, and even tried re-installing. Might it be Mountain Lion? I also was trying to download a movie from a sketchy website at the time my computer took a **** on me, might it be that? Anyways, please help because I am hundreds of miles away from civilization and the nearest Apple Store. Thanks in advance!

MacBook Pro, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.3)

Posted on May 5, 2013 6:27 PM

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27 replies

May 5, 2013 6:57 PM in response to stevensmena

How large is your hard drive and how much hard drive space do you have left?


Sluggish Finder - Bunch of icons on your desktop? An overcrowded desktop slows down your Mac.

Get rid of needless Finder calculations - Open a window in Finder/View/Show View Options: ensure "Calculate All Sizes" option is unchecked.


Internet related - It's likely that your broadband connection is the bottleneck. You can check your speed on http://www.speedtest.net to see how fast your connection is. If your web browser specifically performs slowly, quit and relaunch it.

If browser remains sluggish, empty its cache.

Safari/Empty Cache

Firefox/Preferences - select the Network tab of the Advanced preferences and click the "Clear Now" button in the "Offline Storage" area.


Application related - Launch "Activity Monitor" - Applications/Utilities - click the CPU heading and see what float to the top. If an application takes up a large chunk of CPU and won't let it go, it could be dragging down your Mac's performance. Quit it by clicking the Quit Process button at the top of the Activity Monitor window.


Too little ram - max out your ram.




Seven ways to free up drive space Where did my Disk Space go?


Slimming your hard drive


Seven ways to free up drive space


OmniDiskSweeper is a free utility that checks HD space.


FreeSpace cost $1 or is a free utility that checks HD space.


SpaceControl is a free utility that checks HD space.


FreeSpace cost $.99 - FreeSpace shows you how much space is available on all local, connected, and network drives with a single click.


Rule of thumb: You should never let your hard drive get to where you have only 10-15% of space left.












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May 17, 2013 6:54 PM in response to CMCSK

My hard drive space is fine. I also do not have a problem with apps. I took my laptop to an apple store and he told me that my machine was fine. He said that the operating system was likely the problem. I recently upgraded to 10.8.3. He offered to erase and reinstall an early operating system, 10.6, the one I use to have but I was short on time and had to leave before he could. Now, I am stuck in the middle of nowhere in Peru and somehow have to do this myself? Help!

May 25, 2013 4:13 PM in response to stevensmena

First, back up all data immediately, as your boot drive might be failing.


There are a few other possible causes of generalized slow performance that you can rule out easily.


  • Reset the System Management Controller.
  • If you have many image or video files on the Desktop with preview icons, move them to another folder.
  • If applicable, uncheck all boxes in the iCloud preference pane.
  • Disconnect all non-essential wired peripherals and remove aftermarket expansion cards, if any.
  • Check your keychains in Keychain Access for excessively duplicated items.
  • Boot into Recovery mode, launch Disk Utility, and run Repair Disk.


Otherwise, take the steps below when you notice the problem.


Step 1


Launch the Activity Monitor 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.


☞ Open LaunchPad. Click Utilities, then Activity Monitor in the icon grid.


Select the CPU tab of the Activity Monitor window.


Select All Processes from the menu in the toolbar, if not already selected.


Click the heading of the % CPU column in the process table to sort the entries by CPU usage. You may have to click it twice to get the highest value at the top. What is it, and what is the process? Also post the values for % User, % System, and % Idle at the bottom of the window.


Select the System Memory tab. What values are shown in the bottom part of the window for Page outs and Swap used?


Next, select the Disk Activity tab. Post the approximate values shown for Reads in/sec and Writes out/sec (not Reads in and Writes out.)


Step 2


If you have more than one user account, you must be logged in as an administrator to carry out this step.


Launch the Console application in the same way you launched Activity Monitor. Make sure the title of the Console window is All Messages. If it isn't, select All Messages from the SYSTEM LOG QUERIES menu on the left. If you don't see that menu, select

View Show Log List

from the menu bar.


Select the 50 or so most recent entries in the log. Copy them to the Clipboard (command-C). Paste into a reply to this message (command-V). You're looking for entries at the end of the log, not at the beginning.


When posting a log extract, be selective. Don't post more than is requested.

Please do not indiscriminately dump thousands of lines from the log into this discussion.

Important: Some personal information, such as your name, may appear in the log. Anonymize before posting. That should be easy to do if your extract is not too long.

My Macbook Pro is at a "death crawl" pace, and I'm a hundred miles away from an Apple Store!

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