11 Ways to optimize your Mac’s performance

“Every now and then, my Macs begin to feel a little sluggish. There are many potential reasons why: I tend to run 8-10 applications all the time – and sometimes push 15 or more. This alone will bog down any Mac,” Ed Eubanks Jr. writes for Low End Mac.

Eubanks writes, “At other times, I realize that it’s been weeks since I restarted the computer, and a simple restart will solve a lot of these woes. When those don’t speed things up, I’ve found a number of things I can do to encourage my Macs back to their youthful snappiness. Here are a few tips I’ve found for restoring my Macs to full speed without spending a penny.”

1. Clean out Startup Items
2. Turn off Universal Access, Bluetooth, Speech Recognition, and Internet Sharing if You Don’t Use Them
3. Clean Out ‘Other’ System Preferences
4. Check Out What ‘Build’ Your Software Is
5. Clean Out Unnecessary Code
6. Get Rid of Languages and Translations You Won’t Use
7. Cool Off
8. Evaluate Your Widgets
9. Keep an Eye on Activity Monitor
10. Clean Off Your Hard Driv
11. Run OnyX

Full article, with explanations of each point, here.

MacDailyNews Note: OnyX is a multifunction utility (maintenance, optimization, and personalization). It allows you to run misc tasks of system maintenance, to configure certain hidden parameters of the Finder, Dock, Dashboard, Exposé, Safari, Login window and many Apple’s applications, to delete cache, to remove a certain number of files and folders that may become cumbersome, to see the detailed info of your configuration, to preview the different logs and CrashReporter reports, to check the Preferences files and more. We use OnyX (with the “Xrings 02” icon, FYI). More info and download link (free) here.

43 Comments

  1. “That is the most worthless bit of advice I have ever seen. Must have been written by a mindless ‘switcher’.”

    I am a recent “mindless switcher” – bought my first iMac about a month ago. Question: is the advice given in this article really worthless? Even the advice given in this article is nothing compared to the maintenance my dell required.

  2. -mikeh

    I don’t think this advice sucks necessarily. Stopping unnecessary programs from running frees memory and resources, deleting unused language files frees hard disk space, etc. That is all true and basic common sense of course, but I doubt if it will really change the performance of most Macs unless they are running short of memory or hard disk space.

    Considering you have a new Mac I doubt you’re going to see a noticable performance gain from these steps, but if it’s something you are interested in trying it certainly won’t cause you any problems.

    Oh, and please disregard the snide comment from “amazing crap” about Switchers. I think most Mac users welcome Switchers wholeheartedly and are more than happy to share expertise and answer questions as you change gears from Windows to the Mac world. Welcome aboard.

  3. Oh I forgot, PC’s don’t work as computers because they keep crashing or getting infected with viruses and spyware which is another reason to use them as a door stop. Macs don’t get viruses, spyware, and have yet been compromised on a network. I’ll stick with my Mac any day.

  4. @john- Don’t be a moron (I know it must be hard for you). It’s “they’re” heavier, dingus, not “there” heavier. Go back to rememdial reading and writing class.

    Oh, pummeling “john” was so much fun I almost forgot: @Buster- Is breathing difficult for you? Seems like it. Don’t get too worked up, there, Mac-simp.

    My Mac doorstops were “rescued” from smart, intelligent Windows users who ditched them. I saved them from a landfill life.

    Where’s my award?

  5. “Oh, and please disregard the snide comment from ‘amazing crap’ about Switchers. I think most Mac users welcome Switchers wholeheartedly and are more than happy to share expertise and answer questions as you change gears from Windows to the Mac world.”

    Thanks. I have definitely found this to be true. Having been a Windows user all my life, I would think that I was quite “mindless” before, not now.

    After one hour on my new iMac, I knew I had made the right choice (bought it online after seeing those new TV ads and visiting my local Apple Store). And trust me, I have told everyone I know about my experiences.

    I guess the point of sharing that is just to show that there truly IS a significantly large group of people out there (including my friends, family, etc.) that are VERY open to change.

    Anyway, thanks for the feedback InTheShelter and Moo.

  6. @Mac Sucks

    Breathing is only difficult when you are around…must be your lack of deoderant. Oh btw, I just realized why you don’t have any hemorroids…because you are the perfect A$$hole.

    Go troll somewhere else twit….its got to be past your bedtime now and you don’t want mommy to be upset with you.

    @Enuz Gnat…sheesh….life must be pretty darn slow when you pine so much for ZT.

  7. You want to optimize your Mac’s performance? Get Vista. It ROCKS!

    What do you expect from a 30-year old Unix distro? You Mac nerds just don’t get it. Macs are s l o o o o w. Always have been, always will. You want performance and games? Get Windows. Dorks.

    The Wow is Now.

  8. I love Onyx and recommend it to everyone! My Spotlight was fscked up and refused to search etc and a few more troubles came in around the same focus. Only Onyx was the saviour. There is an option there to reset Spotlight’s index.

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