![]() I notice a speedup when I run off of 7200RPM disk (external SATA behind FW400) compared to when I run on a typical 5400RPM PATA internal. When looking for a speed boost, always take a machine up to its maximum amount of RAM (or as much as you can afford to put in there).Īfter RAM, you can think about upgrading the hard drive. I can not really say whether it made anything faster because both times I have used it I was just testing its defrag function on a freshly restored volume on a brand new drive. The only one I have any personal experience with is Drive Genius. These tools all cost money and are not exactly equivalent. If you are interested in this extra defragmentation, you could try a defrag tool ( iDefrag, the defrag tool in Drive Genius, the “optimize” tool in Techtool Pro, maybe others). Your video/media editing seems like might benefit from free-space defragmentation since you probably deal with very large files fairly often. But some work loads might benefit from free-space defragmentation or other on-disk optimization. To some extent, modern HFS+ volumes will auto-defragment files (see “On-the-fly Defragmentation” in Fragmentation in HFS Plus Volumes). Most all of these have other maintenance functions that you might also consider. ![]() Some new ones I found while researching: Cache Out X, Yasu. Here are some tools I see referenced fairly often: OnyX, Cocktail, AppleJack. In theory, caches can be easily removed by hand (most of them are stored in /Library/Caches and ~/Library/Caches), but maybe the tools add something extra beyond “push button” ease of use. Usually their cache cleaning functions are bundled together with other maintenance tasks. I know there have been some bugs where some applications suffered slow lookups when its cache became very large (I think Safari had this problem with its favicon cache at one point). But otherwise caches are supposed to make things faster. If you want to reclaim disk space, then sure clean those caches. Many users seem to swear by doing a regular “cache cleanup”. If you see stuff in there that you no longer want, select it and click the minus button to delete it from the login sequence.Īn alternative is to create a new user and start from scratch. That will bring up the login items tab of your account in the Accounts preference pane. Open System Preferences and search for ‘login items’. ![]() Login ItemsĪs Fortyrunner said, disable any login items you do not need. It has not been my experience that Macs get too crufty, but there are some things you can do to try to clean them up.
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