Ron_Tomkins
Satan's Helper
- Joined
- Oct 29, 2007
- Messages
- 44,024
Disk Permissions. I have had the same problem with Safari in the past. What you need to do is reset, empty cache, and then go into Disk Utilities and verify and repair disk permissions. Chances are something as moved out of place, and caused the system to go wonky, and this would also effect the iLife apps as well. You should do a verify every so often if you are doing heavy work on the Mac.Ok it just happened a couple times. I have been running nothing but Safari, loading some websites and a couple times the computer froze for a little while and displayed the infamous multicolored spinning wheel on the cursor. So apparently I don't even need to be operating different programs at the same time.
How about this one.....
Get a PC.![]()
I have both a Mac and a PC, and I end up running virtual machines on both. 3ds Max is about the only thing keeping me from going Mac only. Parallels and the like are great things...beats running Virtual PC.Macs ARE PCs.
I'm in Firefox on XP right now on my Mac. I also have Linux running and MacOS too...
Virtual machines rock.
How about this one.....
Get a PC.![]()
Disk Permissions. I have had the same problem with Safari in the past. What you need to do is reset, empty cache, and then go into Disk Utilities and verify and repair disk permissions. Chances are something as moved out of place, and caused the system to go wonky, and this would also effect the iLife apps as well. You should do a verify every so often if you are doing heavy work on the Mac.
I have had a couple times when due to loading several things at the same time, or maybe doing it too fast, has caused the computer to freeze. The mouse cursor turns into the multicolored spinning ball and basically nothing happens. I am then forced to shut down the computer manually.
I'm thinking of reporting this thread because Tomkins hasn't said "You people" yet.
That really sounds like you don't have enough RAM so the system is paging to disk. Since disk is several orders of magnitude slower than RAM the system will appear to grind to a halt (but that beach ball is spinning which is a clue that the whole system isn't frozen). ...
Macintosh HD->Applications->Utilities->Disk Utility
ETA: Computers should be able to find these things for you without mucking around in nested folders. So, for the easy way, type command-space (one finger hits both keys) then type disk in the Spotlight search box. If you are running OS X 10.5.4 it will highlight the Disk Utility application and when you press return, Disk Utility will launch.
The mouse cursor turns into the multicolored spinning ball and basically nothing happens.mended for making sure there hasn't been any malicious malware downloaded into the computer?
Any clever clogs help with another Mac - problem? I have a network storage drive "Zen" and the Mac has (sort-of) been accessing it fine(ish) for sometime. However it's stopped working, ther server shows up as a server in Finder, but when I double click to access it Finder locks up (with the nice busy cursor). I've left the Mac for over 2 hours to see if it was just taking a very long time to access it. The server is working fine (I can access its control panel on my mac via its IP address in the browser). I've checked permissions for both as a guest connection and even tried a passworded user (all of which work fine on the Windows PC I'm running).
Any ideas?
I have had a couple times when due to loading several things at the same time, or maybe doing it too fast, has caused the computer to freeze. The mouse cursor turns into the multicolored spinning ball and basically nothing happens. I am then forced to shut down the computer manually.
What would be the equivalent to the Ctrl Alt Delete option on PC for this situation?
Also, what would be a good Anti-Spyware program recommended for making sure there hasn't been any malicious malware downloaded into the computer?