Tuesday, 13 January 2015

How to Run Heavy Apps Smoothly on Mac OSX System?

23:59

Your must have aspired of the same good speed and performance of your Mac. No doubt, Apple brings the best hardware and upgrades the configuration time to time to keep abreast with the changing users’ need. However, you Mac, in due course of time, fails to perform the way it was performing when you first bought it.

Computer slowdown issues are not always due to accumulation of system wastes, cluttered desktop, overfilled volumes, etc. Such issues may also be due to the massive troubles surrounding people like you. Well, I'm talking about fragmentation and you are very well aware of the fact that Mac OS X does lacks drive defragmentation feature.
Fragmentation on Mac

People like you believe that Mac machines do not get into troubles like fragmentation. However, you do not have proper information about why they do it. In fact, the Mac file system is responsible for fragmentation on Mac.
Want to know how? Read this...

The Mac hard drive has its space divided into blocks of certain sizes where each block is intended to store a file. Well, the same is applicable for the entire drive, including the boot volume. The boot volume gets fragmented due to the execution of system files in a loop, no matter whether or not you run an installed application. When you run an installed application, hundreds of temporary files, containing intermediate data, are generated. All these files are located on the boot volume. The size and quantity of temporary files are subject to the size of the parent application.

When you install and run large applications, such as audio/video editing apps, development tools, and more, the blocks on the boot volume fail to store the temporary files. The state of the hard drive becomes like the large blocks contain small files and the rest of the space is wasted. Meanwhile, many blocks fail to store files and are left as unallocated. All such blocks on the hard drive are termed as fragments.

How Fragmentation Occurs on Mac Boot Volume?

The fraction of space on the boot volume occupied by the OS, is fixed, while the rest of the space is utilized for installing applications. In fact, the space occupied by an application on the boot volume varies with its size. Thus, you can imagine how much space on the boot volume a large application like audio/video editing app or a web applications development app will eat up. When you run such an app, it makes efficient utilization of the system resources (i.e. RAM and CPU). In the mean time, the loop of execution of the system files also generates temporary files that contain heavy blocks of intermediate data. Since all these files store on the boot volume, the unallocated blocks lead to fragmentation because of their incomparable sizes.
How to Deal with Fragmentation?

Fragmentation greatly contributes to computer slowdown. In fact, when it comes to Mac, there is no such inbuilt tool. Though Mac file system scans the files for fragments every time while opening, all such files are not more than 20 MB. In other words, you need to defrag Mac hard drive for large files (>20 MB) in order to make it perform significantly well. To have a defragmentation app for your Mac, consult Mac experts. Alternatively, search for a reliable defragmentation app on the Internet. Once you get the right app, go for defragmenting your Mac boot volume or the entire hard drive and get your Mac speed up.

Note: Use reliable defragmentation app only to avoid consequences, as an inefficient Mac drive defragmentation app may lead to files compression or some like issues.

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I am a Creative Blogger who is addictive to writing on latest topics on Technology, Smartphones, Graphics, Web development and Android

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