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New Retina Macbook pro 13 Haswell system hang/unresponsive

Hello Everyone.


I have just got my new macbook pro retina 13 Haswell (October Model). This is my second day of usage and i have encountered sudden system freeze for 2 times already. The keyboard and the trackpad stops working including brigtness keys and volume control keys. i have use apple hardware test but no problem are found.



Could anyone tell me what is going on or having the same issue?

MacBook Pro with Retina display, OS X Mavericks (10.9)

Posted on Oct 25, 2013 5:56 AM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Oct 25, 2013 7:11 AM

I have met the same problem too!

Mine is also the new macbook pro Haswell.


I have been using my macbook for 2 days.

And I have encountered sudden freeze for 4 times!


The keyboard and the trackpad are unresponsive.

But actually the system is working and the apps are working.


And the power button can actually work.

So every time I met this problem,I long press the power button and make it restart.

And then everything is okay.


Somtimes ,if you wait for 10~15 min, the keyboard and the trackpad will start working again.

When the second time I met this problem, I decided to go to the apple store for help.

But after several mins, it works again.


It is very annoying that the system suddenly freeze when you are busy working on the documents.

And it causes damage that you force to shut down the macbook.


I think it is a software problem?

Hope Apple can release some updates to solve this problem soon!

2,975 replies

Oct 29, 2013 2:29 PM in response to mrakers85

@mrakers85 although you have some good points, I still wonder, how many people are affected by this and how many late2013 MBPs have been sold. If only 5-10% of the new MBPs have this issue, it is much more likely hardware-related (maybe in connection with software, but still hardware). If 80% or more have it, okay, then it is software. But I doubt this. I am afraid, we are just a very few after all, compared to the number of MBPs sold within the last 7 days. And again: Apple says no official word about all this. Why? Some senior advisor saying something on the phone or chat to some customer does not make it official to me, sorry.

To me it seems at this point: some MBPs have a problem. But not all of them. So there has to be a difference. Now which model do I want? One with or one without the problem - no matter whether it will get fixed by software or not.


I have not made up my mind yet, but one thing I know for sure: if Apple does not officially make a statement very soon, I'll return it. Why taking any risk if obviously Apple has not made it's homework?

Oct 29, 2013 2:39 PM in response to kyawlin

Hi, I'm slightly with Oli.S72 here.


We've had lots of different answers from Apple but no one has yet shown some official correspondence and Apple has yet to respond.


I'm almost positive this issue is a result of a software glitch. My freezing has been erratic at best. Yesterday it did it once, today so far touching wood I've not yet had it happen. We have no idea how many are showing this issue. We are maybe a small number, many people may not come onto the forums at all or even know if they exist so we can't go by that either.


My thoughts are this. If there is no official response from Apple by the beginning of next week I'll probably return the laptop for a refund. I have a first edition of the 11" MacBook Air that this was due to replace but I can hold on to it for a little while longer. Then once software or hardware has been acknowledged I'll go and buy a new one I'm in no real rush.

Oct 29, 2013 2:42 PM in response to kyawlin

Note for anyone that doesn't have the benefit I have, I had an old 17" MacBook Pro from about 2007 I think that at around 3 years old suffered a serious glitch that meant I couldn't use it anymore. I contacted a local Apple repairer to see how much it would be to fix and he said don't worry, Apple are replacing the main boards for all laptops in my range due to a known fault, even if out of warranty. It was replaced and running again within a few days. So my past experience of Apple is yes mistakes happen but they have genuinely been very good at sorting me out at least

Oct 29, 2013 2:46 PM in response to kyawlin

Maybe try switching off the Bluetooth? Really my new rMBP hasn't frozen once and the only thing I seem to have done different then everyone suggested here is to turn off the Bluetooth cause I thought it would only consume more battery and I generally don't use it.


It's just a tip that might help some people out. I do however still experiecing some fps drops when switching between tabs and stuff.

Oct 29, 2013 2:53 PM in response to Oli.S72

Oli.S72 wrote:


@mrakers85 although you have some good points, I still wonder, how many people are affected by this and how many late2013 MBPs have been sold. If only 5-10% of the new MBPs have this issue, it is much more likely hardware-related (maybe in connection with software, but still hardware). If 80% or more have it, okay, then it is software. But I doubt this. I am afraid, we are just a very few after all, compared to the number of MBPs sold within the last 7 days. And again: Apple says no official word about all this. Why? Some senior advisor saying something on the phone or chat to some customer does not make it official to me, sorry.

To me it seems at this point: some MBPs have a problem. But not all of them. So there has to be a difference. Now which model do I want? One with or one without the problem - no matter whether it will get fixed by software or not.


I have not made up my mind yet, but one thing I know for sure: if Apple does not officially make a statement very soon, I'll return it. Why taking any risk if obviously Apple has not made it's homework?


Well, what's interesting is that this is very very interesting 😀

What I mean is - there have been a number of reviews on the internet, and no-one seems to have an issue - take for example Engadget:

http://www.engadget.com/2013/10/29/macbook-pro-with-retina-display-review-13-inc h-2013/


They did their review, all around favorable - however, not a sinle mention of a lockup.


BUT, on the flip side - how come this works with Windows? not a single issue?


Then, there's the fact that I would say 90% of the people that have this issue probably don't post.

And then there are those people that return the MacBook and don't buy another.


This topic does not get as much exposure as it should on the web (as sites like Engadget and Arstechnica refuse to post it - I've tried to tip them, more than once),


In essance, I think this is a much broader issue that we've come to belive.

Take for instance my survey

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1QBSLV-bEuxyBUNtFmzDbTWl2Tu3EFU4IPNNvobhKdPA/vie wanalytics


215 responses. That's at least 215 people that have reported this issue, out of X.


If you do a Google search on keywords related to this issue, it's not as high up as it should be.


The fact that Apple ignores this fact publically is really bothersome and annoying to say the least. It doesn't take much to have a CSR come on and say "Look, you do have this issue, it's a widespread issue, and we are working on a fix", even if an ETA is not avalable at the time, it still shows the fact that they are working on it.


I am pretty sure that they are, but the fact that they don't publically acknowlege it is a real pain.


That bein said, I am not sure if any of you remember the MacBook Air issues at launch? The Wireless issue?

Well, I am pretty sure that this issue is much more widespread. 43 pages and couting.


Another thing I see, which is the unfortunate (for Apple) truth, is the fact that you have 14 days to make your customers happy. Even with the 1 year of AppleCare, if you bring it in, and show their techs, they will say "Oh, well we tested it, and nothing is wrong with it, here ya go! You can have it back".


What also bothers most of the community here is the fact that Apple techs say "We've not heard of this issue", and proceed to report it, where it goes from there, and how many comments Apple reads (they get a LOT) is an unknown - also how long it takes to get to them.


In essance, it's not a matter of if, it's a matter of when they will fix it.

If they fix it too late, they will have a slew of refurbs, and a lot of unhappy customers that will never buy Apple products again.

Oct 29, 2013 2:55 PM in response to kyawlin

It has nothing to do with Bluetooth. I had mine off since I got it and still having the freeze issue.

Also, the console message that people keep copying here...I don't think it has anything to do with it. My console is full with that message in the last few hours and didn't have any freeze today.


I just spoke to Apple Support, and surprisingly they didn't find anything in their support database related to this issue (weird). The guy was very helpful and told me that he's going to escalate it to their engineering team. I gave him the link to this site as well.


Please call/chat and support feedback to them so we can get this fixed ASAP.

Oct 29, 2013 2:56 PM in response to kyawlin

Just to add one more thing for people worried. The 14 day money back guarantee is Apple's free grace. You can return in that period for any reason regardless and they'll refund you even if you just don't like the product.


Consumer laws vary country to country but you can find out details here, http://www.apple.com/uk/legal/statutory-warranty where in the EU at least you have 2 years. That means within 2 years the seller, in my case Apple Online is required by law to repair or replace something found to be defective. A laptop that randomly freezes would be considered defective and they'd be required by law to repair it for you. Doing that past the year standard warranty might result in a little battle but within the first year at least they would most definitely replace it for you.


Hope that helps


Cheers


Chris

Oct 29, 2013 3:07 PM in response to binbashdevnull

@binbashnull

> 215 responses. That's at least 215 people that have reported this issue, out of X.

Now I assume X to be around ... what? worldwide? 7 days?
See http://techcrunch.com/2012/07/24/apple-reports-disappointing-mac-sales-despite-r etina-macbook-release-4-million-units-sold-in-q3-2012/ please.


Apple sells Millions of Macs every 3 months. Most of them are MBP we can all assume. If a new model comes out, many people buy instantly because they have waited long for this.
So I assume, the new MBP has been sold worldwide in 7 days at least 400.000 times. That would make your 215 responses around 0,05%.
Am I far off the track with 400.000? I don't know.


All I say is: the X might be the problem in your math. It might turn out that 90% do not have the problem and from the 10% that do have it, only 0,5% report it on your chart.


Correct me if I'm wrong in my calculations somewhere. It's getting late here in Europe ...

New Retina Macbook pro 13 Haswell system hang/unresponsive

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