![]() ![]() It also seems as if multitasking and switching between several open apps has seen a decrease in performance. Again - I'm not a computer science major so I'm largely just making things up □ It seems like perhaps Mavericks itself, the core of the new OS was perhaps installed in a bad sector of the HD, but none of my other files are on bad sectors. It's just initially loading the app takes quite literally 10-20 times longer than Snow Leopard. It doesn't seem like a failing hard drive because I can read/write large chunks of data one an app is finally loaded. Also, anytime you first click the top menu bar in an application you run the risk of a beachball. something seems fundamentally different.įor example, even just opening finder, and navigating to the Applications folder results in sluggish behavior the first time. However, I've been using this computer since 2010 and have never experienced this behavior / speed / delay, etc. I'm not a computer science major but I do understand that when you do something for the first time since a reboot it will need to load new files into the RAM which takes time. This simply never happened in Snow Leopard. ![]() But it seems that quite literally everytime you do "anything" for the first time since the computer has been turned on you run the risk of a spinning beachball and an extended wait. Now granted, once the computer has been on for about 5 minutes, and once you've had an application open for 1-2 minutes, than performance is okay once again. The first time you open an app (Safari, even TextEdit) is far slower than in Snow Leopard. Initial on boot load times seem much slowerĢ. Since installing Mavericks I've noticed two things:ġ. I've been absolutely, 100% thrilled with my MBP's performance / speed since mid 2010. ![]()
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