- #FUSION MACBOOK PRO WINDOWS 10 FONT INSTALL#
- #FUSION MACBOOK PRO WINDOWS 10 FONT PC#
- #FUSION MACBOOK PRO WINDOWS 10 FONT MAC#
I have a lot of scripts my computer has to go through with group policy and all. LOL How am I the sensitive one I am not the one who jsut replied with a novel.
#FUSION MACBOOK PRO WINDOWS 10 FONT PC#
You may find that your boot up times drop dramatically, my old PC boot times held around 40-45 secs, and any deviation from this served as a barometer to developing problems.
try downloading a copy of the "BootVis" Optimizer and running it a few times. Your PC may be beyond all help short of re-installing the OS, but if you're interested and haven't tried this yet. sonicptp? If you are open to suggestions on improving your PC's performance, your 3-7 minute boot times 'are not normal' nor are they 'typical', but rather are signs of a very Sick PC, one that has probably suffered far too many crashes. sonicptp has responded emotionally (multiple times now) to my post, each time choosing to ignore the opportunity to address my plea for assistance, and to offer any constructive input - why is this Mr. "I would like to say, that if anyone is sensitive here - it appears to be Mr. I now have a figure that I can live with and one that can be used to quickly gauge system deterioration.
I then upgraded my OS X.5 to Snow Leopard 10.6 and flushed out the PRAM one more time and have resulted in good solid boot times of 32 secs. Needing a Virtual Machine, I installed VMWare Fusion and configured Fusion to run Boot Camp as my virtual machine, the installation of VMWare Fusion increased my boot times to 35 secs. Yet having apps that must run under Windows, I relunctantly installed WinXP Pro on a Boot Camp partition, boot times for the Windows Boot Camp were surprisingly 2 secs faster than OS 10.5 28 secs. Resetting the PRAM dropped my boot time down from 51 secs. The next thing tried was resetting the 'PRAM'. I did however find remarkable improvement by going into 'System Performance' and pre-selecting a 'Start Up' drive, this one setting surprisingly reduced my boot time from 1:06 secs to 51 secs. Although resolving duplicate fonts in 'Font Book' works for many, I found no duplicate fonts so this technique did not work for me. I'm happy to say that since submitting my post in this forum I have found a couple of things that have reduced my 1:06 time to 30 secs flat!! I will leave them for anyone who wishes to try them as I withdraw my membership and leave your forum. Thanks to all for your suggestions, time permitting I will test them all. I would like to say, that if anyone is sensitive here - it appears to be Mr.
#FUSION MACBOOK PRO WINDOWS 10 FONT INSTALL#
I will say that I am editing HD video with FCP and am running OS X 10.6 (10.6.1), and that I would install 12GB of Ram if possible, for anyone knowing anything of FCP this should be enough. I have niether the time or inclination to enter into unrelated banter, or to list the reasons behind the whys of how I equipped my laptop. My questions were honest and to the point, and my facts accurate.
I meant no offence by my post, and really don't see how anyone with an 'open mind' could take issue with it.
#FUSION MACBOOK PRO WINDOWS 10 FONT MAC#
I will welcome all tips & suggestions anyone has to improve things, right now my Mac is running like a lead sled. I have found the posts today regarding Redundant System Fonts and will try that asap, but I'm sure there's still more that can be done to optimise this sluggish performance. I've seen videos and have read reports of the Macbook Pro booting in the range of 20secs or so, so I'm sure there's something else I should be looking at, but being new to the Mac I'm not quite sure where to look. I expected to see a marked improvement, but my Mac boot time is still panifully slow at 1:06 secs. I purchased a Macbook Pro 17" 2 weeks ago and was not happy with the 1:20 boot times I was getting from the 4gb RAM and 500gb 7200rpm hd, so I upgraded to 8Gigs of RAM (Mushkin PerfectMatch 8GB), and installed a 256GB Crucial M225 2.5" Serial-ATA Solid-State Drive. I was a Windows Poweruser for many years, with the advent of Vista I have given Microsoft the heave-** and have become a Mac convert.