Intego on 12 yo iMac

Joined
Nov 12, 2011
Messages
600
Reaction score
48
Points
28
Your Mac's Specs
MBA 2020 Ventura 13.6 M1 chip 251GB; iPhone SE 3rd gen 128GB; iPad 9, 64GB; MacBook Air 2020
Hope I'm in the right place for posting this.

I have a workhorse 2010 iMac, running El Cap 10.11.6. I deleted Avast, and installed Intego's free app from App Store. First scan ran for 36 hours before I stopped it. No problems found, but 75 files Intego said it couldn't scan. Spouse uses this computer for YouTube, surfing, Gmail, and not much else. I use it for storage, and yes I have an external back up; Time Machine runs auto backups. Of course it runs slower than molasses in the winter. At some point I'll take it to Apple Store and hope they can speed it up a bit.

My question -the scan ran for 36 hours straight before I finally stopped it - is this normal? Scans on my MBA take minutes.
 
Joined
Feb 1, 2011
Messages
4,952
Reaction score
2,976
Points
113
Location
Sacramento, California
I have a workhorse 2010 iMac,... Of course it runs slower than molasses in the winter. At some point I'll take it to Apple Store and hope they can speed it up a bit.

Usually you can easily speed up an old Mac with a bit of routine maintenance:


And if that doesn't do it, this page should help:


My question -the scan ran for 36 hours straight before I finally stopped it - is this normal? Scans on my MBA take minutes.

What isn't normal is for a VirusBarrier scan to take only a few minutes. Unless you only scanned a small folder and nothing else.

It isn't unusual for a VB scan to take several hours. Once you do a full disk scan, after that you can set VB just to scan new files as they come in in your Downloads folder, which will save a lot of time.

Sometimes scans can get quite long if VB gets stuck on encrypted files, or files that the system protects. VB will try to scan them until it times out, making your scan quite long.
 
Joined
Sep 30, 2007
Messages
9,962
Reaction score
1,236
Points
113
Location
The Republic of Neptune
Your Mac's Specs
2019 iMac 27"; 2020 M1 MacBook Air; macOS up-to-date... always.
You say you deleted Avast. Did you did a full and proper uninstall, or did you simply trash the app? If the latter, you have a lot more work to do. Here's Avast's own instructions on how to uninstall their software, but you may need to use an app like Find Any File or EasyFind to hunt down remnants that even their uninstaller may leave behind.

If that iMac still has the original HDD, there's a fair chance that it's dying. Randy's page on slowdown solutions is fairly comprehensive and one item that I would jump straight to is do a SMART check on your drive to see what the self reporting diagnostics have to say. DriveDx is one great one that he lists, which I use also.
 
OP
rainbowcat
Joined
Nov 12, 2011
Messages
600
Reaction score
48
Points
28
Your Mac's Specs
MBA 2020 Ventura 13.6 M1 chip 251GB; iPhone SE 3rd gen 128GB; iPad 9, 64GB; MacBook Air 2020
Usually you can easily speed up an old Mac with a bit of routine maintenance:


And if that doesn't do it, this page should help:




What isn't normal is for a VirusBarrier scan to take only a few minutes. Unless you only scanned a small folder and nothing else.

It isn't unusual for a VB scan to take several hours. Once you do a full disk scan, after that you can set VB just to scan new files as they come in in your Downloads folder, which will save a lot of time.

Sometimes scans can get quite long if VB gets stuck on encrypted files, or files that the system protects. VB will try to scan them until it times out, making your scan quite long.
The first scan on my MBA did take quite a while, now it's pretty fast.
Will definitely check out those links to speed up the iMac - thanks much!
 
OP
rainbowcat
Joined
Nov 12, 2011
Messages
600
Reaction score
48
Points
28
Your Mac's Specs
MBA 2020 Ventura 13.6 M1 chip 251GB; iPhone SE 3rd gen 128GB; iPad 9, 64GB; MacBook Air 2020
You say you deleted Avast. Did you did a full and proper uninstall, or did you simply trash the app? If the latter, you have a lot more work to do. Here's Avast's own instructions on how to uninstall their software, but you may need to use an app like Find Any File or EasyFind to hunt down remnants that even their uninstaller may leave behind.

If that iMac still has the original HDD, there's a fair chance that it's dying. Randy's page on slowdown solutions is fairly comprehensive and one item that I would jump straight to is do a SMART check on your drive to see what the self reporting diagnostics have to say. DriveDx is one great one that he lists, which I use also.
Did a proper uninstall using Avast uninstaller. Everything on the iMac is the original, and I'm amazed it still runs at all! Going to check out those links to speed things up a bit. Thank you for your help.

(Life IS a beach - I'm a total beach bum!)
 

Shop Amazon


Shop for your Apple, Mac, iPhone and other computer products on Amazon.
We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate program designed to provide a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon and affiliated sites.
Top