
- Mac mini very slow how to#
- Mac mini very slow install#
- Mac mini very slow upgrade#
- Mac mini very slow software#
- Mac mini very slow download#
Mac mini very slow upgrade#
It had 1gb of RAM but on the spot I asked them to upgrade it with 1 more so in total I have 2 gb now. I bought the mini with Tiger just before Leopard was released. Sorry to bring this issue back but I have a similar problem with you, however after calling twice Apple i couldn t get any specific answer to what is happening to my mini mac. YASU (and the other utilities of this type) are not for regular use however, so one pass is enough! This will clear a number of potential problems, and while the system will reboot much more slowly than usual, and run sluggishly at first, it will generally perform a little better after that. Don't have any other application open or the system n use for anything else while using this kind of utility, and let the system restart after completion of the tasks.
Mac mini very slow download#
It would do no harm to download a copy of a general maintenance utility such as YASU ( You might also find issues with Disk permissions or out of date prebinding, along with possible caching problems are capable of causing the set of broad issues you outline.
Mac mini very slow software#
It's also possible for problematic fonts to cause poor system performance and instabilities - you can check for these and resolve duplicate fonts which are often caused by software installing their own libraries, using the Font Book (in Applications). Of note, typically there is no reason to strip PPC binaries from applications - in all but a rare few instances, universal apps run on Intel hardware will only fire up Intel processes (though this can be checked by looking in Activity Monitor for a little peace of mind). What applications do you have installed? Which do you use regularly? How many apps are you typically running at a time? How much free space do you have on your startup drive?
Mac mini very slow install#
In those instances, backing up data and then performing an erase and install of Leopard resolved almost all problems. The reason for asking is that at the outset, there were a number of users who used the default upgrade to leopard and who subsequently found issues with their systems, much along the lunes of those you describe. Overall however, after running YASU, I would seriously consider a RAM upgrade as a matter of near-necessity.Īssuming no PPC software in active use, a 1.83 GHz mini with 1Gb RAM ought to run Leopard reasonably well, and though occasional crashes are always a possibility, they are not in any sense typical.ĭid your mini come with Leopard installed, or did it have Tiger and you subsequently updated? If the latter, did you perform a default 'upgrade' install of Leopard or a complete erase and install. While you have stripped PPC binaries, you may find PPC processes running as a result of widgets, drivers, utilities for peripherals, etc.

I would also check Activity Monitor to make sure all running processes are Intel, and none are Power PC. Upgrading to 2Gb (or even maxing out to 4Gb, of which 3.3 is usable by Core 2 Duo minis) would be a good idea.
Mac mini very slow how to#
I checked for abnormally high CPU usage, and didn't find anything.Īnyone know how to fix this? Is there some hidden setting to get the VNC server to do some kind of compression? Or is the slowest mac mini just too slow to do VNC? (which I would find hard to believe, because my raspberry pi does it fine).Since you did an erase and install at initial use in order to put Leopard on the system, I don't think there would be anything to gain from performing another one at this time, unless running Disk Utility were to indicate a problem with the hard drive itself - in which case you would likely be suffering a significantly higher level of problems and system crashes.ĭepending on which apps are running, 4 or 5 could be a rather high memory load, or relatively light! I would say, however, that 1Gb RAM is the realistic minimum for Leopard on an Intel-based Mac, so even with no PPC processes running, your system is not likely to be performing at its best with that level of RAM. The mac mini was originally on wifi, but I hard wired it with ethernet, and still slow. I use tightVNC with my raspberry pi home automation system, and my work PC, and they work fine. I have tried all the settings on tightVNC to get it to go faster or do some kind of compression, but the settings don't seem to do anything. I have tried other VNC clients on my PC, they are all also slow, and I haven't been able to get any other VNC servers to work at all on the mac.

The framerate is usually less than 1 FPS, although sometimes for brief spurts I can get a decent framerate, but only for a fraction of a second. I use the built in VNC server in the mac mini to use a tightVNC on my PC.

It's not that I don't like macs, it's just that I already have thousands sunk into hardware and software for my PC. I bought it to compile my game for iOS, and don't use it for anything else.

I have a mac mini, the newest version, and also the slowest version.
