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my macbook pro is slow.

Even opening a new tab in the browser causes this circle to start dancing on my screen. EVERY application I open dances on the bottom bar for a time which looks like eternity. When it wakes up from a sleep I need to wait like a minute until it let me type my password in the box. Changing screen saver - every step causes some pause with the annoying circle that shows he is thinking about something. What am I doing wrong? I have it for like 3 years. I see other people just press on app and it jumps to the screen lively and ready to work. Why mine is like turtle?

MacBook Pro, OS X Mavericks (10.9.3)

Posted on Feb 10, 2016 9:07 PM

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2 replies

Feb 10, 2016 9:36 PM in response to amirfromdallas

When you see a beachball cursor or the slowness is especially bad, note the exact time: hour, minute, second.

These instructions must be carried out as an administrator. If you have only one user account, you are the administrator.

Launch the Console application in any one 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 and start typing the name.

The title of the Console window should be All Messages. If it isn't, select

SYSTEM LOG QUERIES All Messages

from the log list on the left. If you don't see that list, select

View Show Log List

from the menu bar at the top of the screen.

Each message in the log begins with the date and time when it was entered. Scroll back to the time you noted above.

Select the messages entered from then until the end of the episode, or until they start to repeat, whichever comes first.

Copy the messages to the Clipboard by pressing the key combination command-C. Paste into a reply to this message by pressing command-V.

The log contains a vast amount of information, almost all of it useless for solving any particular problem. When posting a log extract, be selective. A few dozen lines are almost always more than enough.

Please don't indiscriminately dump thousands of lines from the log into this discussion.

Please don't post screenshots of log messages—post the text.

Some private information, such as your name, may appear in the log. Anonymize before posting.

When you post the log extract, you might see an error message on the web page: "You have included content in your post that is not permitted," or "The message contains invalid characters." That's a bug in the forum software. Please post the text on Pastebin, then post a link here to the page you created.

If you have an account on Pastebin, please don't select Private from the Paste Exposure menu on the page, because then no one but you will be able to see it.

Feb 11, 2016 5:19 AM in response to amirfromdallas

If its any consolation I was having the same issues after upgrading to El Capitan about a month ago. My Macbook Pro was running painfully slow, and icons were jumping in the doc for what seemed an age. Got the beachball all the time, photos crashed constantly, it wasn't good.....


In the end I took a full backup on time machine and erased the hard drive and did a restore of El Capitan. In effect starting as if it were a new Macbook


After 48 hours the Macbook is running perfectly, no crashes yet, no jumping icons etc


If you do this just make sure you have everything backed up. As its lost otherwise

my macbook pro is slow.

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