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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Desktop Hardware
iStat Screenshot, anything wrong?
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<blockquote data-quote="pigoo3" data-source="post: 1519056" data-attributes="member: 56379"><p>I would really recommend getting that LCD cable & installing it before doing anything else (just so there aren't any confusing results). But if you insist:</p><p></p><p>1. Open "Activity Monitor"...select "All Processes" at the top of the window...look thru the list and see if anything is going on that shouldn't be...AND is taking up a lot of cpu resources.</p><p></p><p>For example...right now on my computer I only have a couple of simple programs open (Safari and Mail)...and my computer is using around 15-20% cpu resources (out of 400%...4 cores).</p><p></p><p>2. Download & run a program called "Onyx" (automated setting). It's basically a file maintenance program that "cleans", straightens up, reorganizes things back to the way they should be for best performance.</p><p></p><p>HTH,</p><p></p><p>- Nick</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="pigoo3, post: 1519056, member: 56379"] I would really recommend getting that LCD cable & installing it before doing anything else (just so there aren't any confusing results). But if you insist: 1. Open "Activity Monitor"...select "All Processes" at the top of the window...look thru the list and see if anything is going on that shouldn't be...AND is taking up a lot of cpu resources. For example...right now on my computer I only have a couple of simple programs open (Safari and Mail)...and my computer is using around 15-20% cpu resources (out of 400%...4 cores). 2. Download & run a program called "Onyx" (automated setting). It's basically a file maintenance program that "cleans", straightens up, reorganizes things back to the way they should be for best performance. HTH, - Nick [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
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iStat Screenshot, anything wrong?
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