![]() ![]() I can also mention that scrolling through pictures with QL pushes CPU quite high (40-85%). How is this so common that it's so hard to get a machine that just eats through this kind of work effortlessly with no lag? Thoughts anyone? 631 5 everything is clean and configured perfectly as far as I can tell. I've tried all the tricks I've found and read about like fine-tuning my Illustrator performance and file management settings, cleaning up SSD storage space and clutter, minimizing startup items. It ends up costing me hours of my workday waiting for things to catch up as the progress wheel spins and it's driving me insane. ![]() In some ways it has - but in other ways it's worse. But it still has been costing me time and often will bog down and I'll have to quit out of stuff and restart it. Side-by-side, literally sitting on the same work table, the M1 is a much smoother experience, opens apps and files quicker and generally just feels more responsive and cleaner - is much nicer to look at even and is much easier on the eyes, which is surprising. So I bought an iMac Pro - with plenty of power and then some - and it still is even worse than the M1. I have a 24" iMac M1 with 8GB of RAM, and it was lagging in Illustrator too often as well. Ventura 13.1 / 3.2 GHz 8-Core Intel Xeon W / 32 GB 2666 MHz DDR4 IMac Pro Supposed to be fast, but lags constantly running Illustrator I can't for the life of me figure out how this muscle-bound iMac Pro in pristine condition with overpowered specs - fully up-to-date - could possibly be lagging while trying to edit vector files in illustrator. But after a while it becomes slow again, and again. My iMac is now 40 days up and Finder relaunch helped. There is 6th High Sierra update already and the problem sill persists. I hope Apple is seeing this post, as the issue is quite annoying. Normal QL behavior is also after logout/login.Or even if I just relaunch Finder. What I encountered is that after reboot previewing works normally/instantly. I just wonder if it is new hardwer, retina display, Finder/QL bug. This was not happening on my old iMac 21" Late 2009. Scrolling through pictures in Finder also works slow and thumbnails in Finder are showing also slow. When QL Previewing pictures it takes a second or two tho show the picture. MacOS at that time was 10.13.1, and now is 10.13.6. My specs are iMac i5 3.4 27-inch 5K Mid-2017, SSD. Last year I bought new iMac and encountered that QuickLook Preview is very slow. You might need to reboot the machine once, or to logout and login once.There are other similar/same questions already on this forum, but no resolution. Then, explicitly empty the trash to really remove the old version. Right-click on the MenuMeters icon, and from the pop-up menu, choose to remove MenuMeters. Information on memory usage, processor usage, and Internet connection performance are also available from MenuMeters. The data can be displayed numerically, in graphs, or by combining both forms. MenuMeters can report on CPU usage, disk activity, memory status, and network traffic. MenuMeters 1.7 adds support for compressed memory information on 10.9 'Mavericks'. MenuMeters 1.8 updates MenuMeters for Mac OS X 10.10 'Yosemite'. ![]() Most were windows that sat in a corner or on the desktop, which are inevitably obscured by document windows on a laptop's small screen. MenuMeters for Mac is a set of CPU, memory, disk, and network monitoring tools for macOS.Although there are numerous other programs which do the same thing, none had quite the feature set I was looking for. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |