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Apple Computing Products:
macOS - Operating System
Scroll jank after macOS update(s)
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<blockquote data-quote="MacInWin" data-source="post: 1906867" data-attributes="member: 396914"><p>IF and only IF, you actually did the uninstall properly. AVAST is known to be persistent, leaving behind crapola that runs even after the user THINKS it's been uninstalled. That is one of the reasons it's viewed with hostility. Software should behave properly, AVAST does not.</p><p></p><p>You can run Etrecheck to see if any left over stuff is loading at boot or login. </p><p></p><p>It is unlikely because if it were systemic, there would be lots of comments/complaints about the issue. The absence of those comments/complaints is generally a good indicator that the odd occurrence of the issue is more likely to be a local problem to that user/system. Apple generally responds well to user complaints, particularly those that affect the user experience. Now, if only Apple would plug the memory leak in the Finder Search function...</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MacInWin, post: 1906867, member: 396914"] IF and only IF, you actually did the uninstall properly. AVAST is known to be persistent, leaving behind crapola that runs even after the user THINKS it's been uninstalled. That is one of the reasons it's viewed with hostility. Software should behave properly, AVAST does not. You can run Etrecheck to see if any left over stuff is loading at boot or login. It is unlikely because if it were systemic, there would be lots of comments/complaints about the issue. The absence of those comments/complaints is generally a good indicator that the odd occurrence of the issue is more likely to be a local problem to that user/system. Apple generally responds well to user complaints, particularly those that affect the user experience. Now, if only Apple would plug the memory leak in the Finder Search function... [/QUOTE]
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Apple Computing Products:
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Scroll jank after macOS update(s)
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