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Slow loading Finder in Mavericks?

I bought the brand new Macbook Pro Retina that came with Mavericks plus I upgraded my old Macbook Pro Retina to Mavericks before my new one came. On both computers I am noticing a few different things that are rather annoying.


When attaching documents to emails, etc... it is taking my finder forever to load the contents of the directory I am trying to access. It is doing this on both computers, so I am assuming this is something to do with Mavericks and not the new computer. It is rather frustrating because for my job, I am contstantly attaching documents to emails every day, but having to wait a good minute or two for a directory to load to find what I am looking for to attach is getting rather annoying.


Even my stickie notes load slow now when opening them in Mavericks and it has never done that before. They kind of appear laggy when loading. Usually they just popped right up.


Is anybody else experiencing this problem? Any suggestions for a fix? I really enjoy Mavericks but it seems to be messing with the overall performance of some things.

Posted on Oct 30, 2013 8:05 AM

Reply
261 replies

Oct 9, 2014 10:04 AM in response to kufan0001

For any of you still suffering from this issue, who are using Dropbox, try the following:


Go to System Preferences > Users & Groups > Login Items > and delete Dropbox.


Restart the machine and confirm Dropbox is no longer loading (not in the menubar). And test the finder.


I have found on two machines now a hosed install of Dropbox that makes the finder absolutely useless. In the first case, clean creating the user from scratch solved the issue. The second one... I'm about to try right now...

Oct 13, 2014 5:13 AM in response to satishfromfl

I tried almost everything here to no avail. Sometimes some of the terminal commands would fix finder in the short term but then later it would slow down again. I booted in safe mode and the problem was not there and finder was snappy in safe mode. I tried changing all the different Finder preferences but that made absolutely no difference. Finally I saw the post, can't remember which page it was one, about the ethernet cable ( I'm connected using ethernet ) and disconnected the ethernet cable. I plugged it back in, rebooted, and Finder is back to being its old snappy self again and has stayed snappy 1 day later. Not sure why the ethernet connection was affecting finder, but its fixed and I'm happy.

Nov 9, 2014 9:32 AM in response to medeski

Are you running Dropbox or Google Drive?


I still occasionally find that Dropbox slows down Finder. As a result I only run Dropbox when I want it to sync, after which I quit Dropbox and then restart Finder. Even after quitting Dropbox, Finder will stay slow until I restart Finder. I have heard similar problems have been experienced with Google Drive running, but in my case I traced it back to Dropbox.

Nov 9, 2014 8:43 PM in response to BoTillie

Hi,

No dropbox or google drive. I honestly tried all suggested solutions here and none worked. It did happen when i updated to Mavericks so i was so sure it will be gone with Yosemite but it's still here. It's a small thing but drives me crazy - especially that i know that it's just my user specific problem. I'm actually thinking about moving whole profile to a new user.

Nov 13, 2014 8:54 PM in response to donaldruby

OK kids, after spending hours trawling through the more than 247 posts, dozens of Google entries, and trialling the various "fixes" suggested in these posts & entries including but not limited to:

1) forcing Finder to default bu deleting its 'live' plist

2) updating /net .... command in one of the UIHelper view

3) removing NapApp flag in Finder components

4) .....

etc etc etc

.....

the ONE 'simple' AGE-OLD remedy that worked for me is FIXING the Permissions in ALL files and file-systems and VERIFYING that my entire 512GB MacIntosh-SSD is absolutely HEALTHY (no HW errors).


Good luck and may the Force be with you all ....

Nov 13, 2014 9:09 PM in response to medeski

Hi,


I emphatized with you, after trialling almost all of the suggested solutions herein, I too was a little frustrated but then feeling 'blessed' by just doing my 'simple' AGE-OLD remedy that worked for me. That is FIXING the Permissions in ALL files and file-systems and VERIFYING that my entire 512GB MacIntosh-SSD is absolutely HEALTHY (no HW errors).


I did that by using the Mac Disk Utility (command+R buttons together as I retsarted my machine), selecting "Disk Utility" and then, sequentially did the below actions:

1) VERIFY Permissions and then FIX Permissions

2) VERIFY Disk (and then FIX disk if you need to).


And ... voila ... after retsarting my machine, Finder comes 'alive' and (very) FAST again.


Good luck ....

Jan 28, 2015 11:24 AM in response to rubyreddevon

Hi all,


Months later since this thread started, and I was having the very same issue with a super slow finder in Mavericks. I only just made the jump to it, and was immediately regretting it.


I tried all sorts of things, and it wasn't until I got this golden Terminal Command tip from rubyreddevon, did the problem find resolution. Thanks so much Ruby - that Terminal trick. Worked immediately. What up Apple... sheesh...

Mar 6, 2015 2:02 PM in response to blurped

blurped wrote:


sudo defaults write com.apple.Finder NSAppSleepDisabled -bool YES


It's a logical solution, since it clearly is the AppNap causing the issue. I tested the command out on my new MBP running OS X Mavericks and I'm no longer having 30 second wait times for large libraries to load.

kufan0001 wrote:


Grr.... maybe I will hold off on trying this then as it does not seem to be helping everybody. How irritating!


ℹ It's absolutely worth a try. Here's why:


1) We know AppNap is a new feature that puts the finder to sleep when not in use

2) So logically we can infer that disabling AppNap will solve the 'AppNap' lag

3) We can fix it by going to Applications/Utilities/Terminal to issue a very basic command


➕ The command is:


sudo defaults write com.apple.Finder NSAppSleepDisabled -bool YES



It's strange, I tried that Terminal command in Mavericks 10.9.5 (latest with all updates) and the Finder still naps. I watch it nap in Activity Monitor as if I didn't change anything. I copy and pasted the command into Terminal exactly as seen quoted above and also even tried a restart of the computer, but the Finder still naps.


Did Apple change something in 10.9.5 or otherwise so we cannot stop the Finder from napping even after using that Terminal command?

Mar 6, 2015 10:49 PM in response to petermac87

Thanks, Pete. I've done that before while troubleshooting Mavericks Finder sluggishness, but I hadn't seen that's what people are doing after doing the Terminal command. Does everyone have to trash the Finder prefs afterwards or it doesn't work, or is this a suggestion since it's not working for me after a restart without trashing the Finder prefs?

Slow loading Finder in Mavericks?

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