GrandPerspective offers a highly visual display of what’s taking up space on your Mac Onyx cleans up the Mac files you’d be afraid to touch yourself… Below, I’ll show you how two completely free Mac programs, GrandPerspective and OnyX, will do all the heavy lifting for you. Next, cleanse the cruft OS X builds up in the background as you use your computer. First, find and delete enough files to leave your Mac at least 50GB of free storage capacity - enough room for the Mac to work without pausing to manage its hard drive space. This How-To article offers a simpler alternative. That’s not as hard as it sounds, but it’s a radical and fairly time-consuming solution.
Even die-hard Apple fans will admit that Macs typically run new OS X versions better (faster, and with fewer bugs) if you start with a clean slate: completely wipe your hard drive, do a fresh install of the latest OS X release, and restore only the files you need. I’ve devoted several columns to hardware solutions - replacing old hard drives with fast new SSDs, adding more RAM, and increasing storage capacity using an external drive - but there are software solutions, too.
Another positive step to take is keeping your Mac updated, so that new software patches can be applied, leaving your computer less vulnerable to bad characters.Īnd, as always, be sure to back up your Mac so that, even in the event of a virus, your data and media are protected.“My Mac used to be fast, but now it’s running so slow.” I’ve heard many versions of this complaint, and they’re always factually true, not just opinions: Macs do become sluggish over time, even if all of their chips and hard drives are working like new. Installing a security system on your Mac is also a good idea to prevent malware from infecting your computer in the future.
How to avoid getting another virus on your Macīe sure to look out for virus-friendly websites and files, and avoid them by doing things like leaving spam emails unopened and only downloading from trusted, known sources