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MacBookPro slow to load/failure to load webpages Pls help

My macbook pro 10.9.5 os x is new to me. I wiped it myself of the previous owners stuff that she had on it, i'm not too tech savvy and i'm having trouble getting the safari to run as safe and fast as it should. It will load any shopping site no problem, but anything other than that really it takes a long time to load, often getting the spinning beach ball. Or the blue bar will just stop where it is at and i will get the "safari cannot load this webpage" bizz. I really need some help, this going to be my college computer 😟

Posted on Apr 18, 2016 12:03 PM

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4 replies

Apr 18, 2016 1:01 PM in response to lilli.hill

Before acquiring a second-hand computer, you should have run Apple Diagnostics or the Apple Hardware Test, whichever is applicable.

The first thing to do after acquiring the computer is to erase the internal drive and install a clean copy of OS X. You—not the original owner—must do that. Changes made by Apple over the years have made this seemingly straightforward task very complex.

How you go about it depends on the model, and on whether you already own another Mac. If you're not sure of the model, enter the serial number on this page. Then find the model on this page to see what OS version was originally installed.

It's unsafe, and may be unlawful, to use a computer with software installed by a previous owner.

1. If you don't own another Mac

a. If the machine shipped with OS X 10.4 or 10.5, you need a boxed and shrink-wrapped retail Snow Leopard (OS X 10.6) installation disc from the Apple Store or a reputable reseller—not from eBay or anything of the kind. If the machine is very old and has less than 1 GB of memory, you'll need to add more in order to install 10.6. Preferably, install as much memory as it can take, according to the technical specifications.

b. If the machine shipped with OS X 10.6, you need the installation media that came with it: gray installation discs, or a USB flash drive for a MacBook Air. You should have received the media from the original owner, but if you didn't, order replacements from Apple. A retail disc, or the gray discs from another model, will not work.

To start up from an optical disc or a flash drive, insert it, then restart the computer and hold down the C key at the startup chime. Release the key when you see the gray Apple logo on the screen.

c. If the machine shipped with OS X 10.7 or later, you don't need media. It should start up in Internet Recovery mode when you hold down the key combination option-command-R at the startup chime. Release the keys when you see a spinning globe. Note that Mac Pro tower models older than late 2014 (with the "cheese-grater" enclosure) cannot use Internet Recovery, regardless of which OS version they shipped with. The round Mac Pro (2014 or later) can use it.

d. Some 2010-2011 models shipped with OS X 10.6 and received a firmware update after 10.7 was released, enabling them to use Internet Recovery. If you have one of those models, you can't reinstall 10.6 even from the original media, and Internet Recovery will not work either without the original owner's Apple ID. In that case, contact Apple Support, or take the machine to an Apple Store or another authorized service provider to have the OS installed.

2. If you do own another Mac

If you already own another Mac that was upgraded in the App Store to the version of OS X that you want to install, and if the new Mac is compatible with it, then you can install it. Use Recovery Disk Assistant to prepare a USB device, then start up the new Mac from it by holding down the C key at the startup chime. Alternatively, if you have a Time Machine backup of OS X 10.7.3 or later on an external hard drive (not a Time Capsule or other network device), you can start from that by holding down the option key and selecting it from the row of icons that appears. Note that if your other Mac was never upgraded in the App Store, you can't use this method.

3. Partition and install OS X

a. If you see a lock screen when trying to start up from installation media or in Recovery mode, then a firmware password was set by the previous owner, or the machine was remotely locked via iCloud. You'll either have to contact the owner or take the machine to an Apple Store or another service provider to be unlocked. You may be asked for proof of ownership.

b. Launch Disk Utility and select the icon of the internal drive—not any of the volume icons nested beneath it. In the Partition tab, select the default options: a GUID partition table with one data volume in Mac OS Extended (Journaled) format. This operation will permanently remove all existing data on the drive.

c. An unusual problem may arise if all the following conditions apply:

OS X 10.7 or later was installed by the previous owner

The startup volume was encrypted with FileVault

You're booted in Recovery mode (that is, not from a 10.6 installation disc)

In that case, you won't be able to unlock the volume or partition the drive without the FileVault password. Ask for guidance or see this ASC discussion.

d. After partitioning, quit Disk Utility and run the OS X Installer. If you're installing a version of OS X acquired from the App Store, you will need the Apple ID and password that you used. When the installation is done, the system will automatically restart into the Migration Assistant, which will prompt you to transfer the data from another Mac, its backups, or from a Windows computer. If you have any data to transfer, this is usually the best time to do it.

e. Run Software Update and install all available system updates from Apple. To upgrade to a major version of OS X newer than 10.6, get it from the Mac App Store. Note that you can't keep an upgraded version that was installed by the original owner. He or she can't legally transfer it to you, and without the Apple ID you won't be able to update it in Software Update or reinstall, if that becomes necessary. The same goes for any App Store products that the previous owner installed—you have to repurchase them.

4. Other issues

a. If the original owner "accepted" the bundled iLife applications (iPhoto, iMovie, and Garage Band) in the App Store so that he or she could update them, then they're irrevocably linked to that Apple ID and you won't be able to download them without buying them. Reportedly, Mac App Store Customer Service has sometimes issued redemption codes for these apps to second owners who asked.

b. If the previous owner didn't deauthorize the computer in the iTunes Store under his Apple ID, you wont be able to authorize it immediately under your ID. In that case, you'll either have to wait up to 90 days or contact iTunes Support.

c. When trying to create a new iCloud account, you might get a failure message: "Account limit reached." Apple imposes a lifetime limit of three iCloud account setups per device. Erasing the device does not reset the limit. You can still use an iCloud account that was created on another device, but you won't be able to create a new one. Contact iCloud Support for more information. The setup limit doesn't apply to Apple ID accounts used for other services, such as the iTunes and Mac App Stores, or iMessage. You can create as many of those accounts as you like.

Apr 19, 2016 5:31 PM in response to lllaass

EtreCheck version: 2.9.11 (264)

Report generated 2016-04-19 18:18:53

Download EtreCheck from https://etrecheck.com

Runtime 1:32

Performance: Excellent


Click the [Support] links for help with non-Apple products.

Click the [Details] links for more information about that line.


Problem: Computer is too slow

Description:

Safari too slow/will display Safari cannot connect to the webpage. Or will load incorrectly.


Hardware Information:

MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Mid 2014)

[Technical Specifications] - [User Guide] - [Warranty & Service]

MacBook Pro - model: MacBookPro11,1

1 2.6 GHz Intel Core i5 CPU: 2-core

8 GB RAM Not upgradeable

BANK 0/DIMM0

4 GB DDR3 1600 MHz ok

BANK 1/DIMM0

4 GB DDR3 1600 MHz ok

Bluetooth: Good - Handoff/Airdrop2 supported

Wireless: en0: 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac

Battery: Health = Normal - Cycle count = 160


Video Information:

Intel Iris

Color LCD 2560 x 1600


System Software:

OS X Mavericks 10.9.5 (13F34) - Time since boot: less than an hour


Disk Information:

APPLE SSD SD0128F disk0 : (121.33 GB) (Solid State - TRIM: Yes)

EFI (disk0s1) <not mounted> : 210 MB

Macintosh HD (disk0s2) / : 120.47 GB (104.77 GB free)

Recovery HD (disk0s3) <not mounted> [Recovery]: 650 MB


USB Information:

Apple Internal Memory Card Reader

Apple Inc. BRCM20702 Hub

Apple Inc. Bluetooth USB Host Controller

Apple Inc. Apple Internal Keyboard / Trackpad


Thunderbolt Information:

Apple Inc. thunderbolt_bus


Gatekeeper:

Mac App Store and identified developers


Kernel Extensions:

/Library/Application Support/Kaspersky Lab/KAV/Bases/Cache

[loaded] com.kaspersky.kext.kimul.46 (46 - 2016-04-19) [Support]

[loaded] com.kaspersky.kext.mark.1.0.6 (1.0.6 - 2016-04-19) [Support]


/Library/Extensions

[loaded] com.kaspersky.kext.klif (3.4.0a25 - 2016-04-19) [Support]

[loaded] com.kaspersky.nke (2.1.0 - 2016-04-19) [Support]


System Launch Agents:

[not loaded] 4 Apple tasks

[loaded] 147 Apple tasks

[running] 32 Apple tasks


System Launch Daemons:

[not loaded] 50 Apple tasks

[loaded] 143 Apple tasks

[running] 55 Apple tasks


Launch Agents:

[running] com.kaspersky.kav.gui.plist (2016-04-19) [Support]


Launch Daemons:

[running] com.kaspersky.kav.plist (2016-04-19) [Support]


User Login Items:

iTunesHelper Application (/Applications/iTunes.app/Contents/MacOS/iTunesHelper.app)


Other Apps:

[running] [0x0-0x21021].com.etresoft.EtreCheck

[loaded] 433 Apple tasks

[running] 262 Apple tasks


Internet Plug-ins:

Default Browser: 537 - SDK 10.9 (2016-04-10)

QuickTime Plugin: 7.7.3 (2016-04-10)


Safari Extensions:

Virtual Keyboard - Kaspersky Lab - http://kaspersky.com (2016-04-18)

Kaspersky URL Advisor - Kaspersky Lab - http://kaspersky.com (2016-04-18)


3rd Party Preference Panes:

None


Time Machine:

Time Machine not configured!


Top Processes by CPU:

5% fontd

4% WindowServer

3% Dock

1% kav

1% kernel_task


Top Processes by Memory:

441 MB kernel_task

410 MB com.apple.WebKit.WebContent

279 MB Safari

213 MB kav

82 MB Dock


Virtual Memory Information:

4.65 GB Free RAM

3.35 GB Used RAM (1.52 GB Cached)

0 B Swap Used


Diagnostics Information:

Apr 19, 2016, 05:59:59 PM Self test - passed

MacBookPro slow to load/failure to load webpages Pls help

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