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Classic applications in Mac OS X

When running Mac OS X, you don't need to manually set anapplication's memory size for native applications. Mac OS Xadjusts the amount of memory as the application requires more or lessspace. However, you do need to set an application's memory size ifyou are running an application in Mac OS X's Classicenvironment. To do this, follow these directions:

  1. Determine how much memory is available and accessible to your computer. This will give you an idea how much extra memory you can allocate to the application. From the Apple menu, select About This Mac.
  2. Make sure the application whose memory allocation you want toincrease is closed. Highlight the application's icon.
  3. From the File menu, select Get Info or ShowInfo. The application's information window should open.
  4. In the information window:
    • In Mac OS X 10.2.x and later, click the arrow to the left of'Memory:' so that it is facing down.
    • In Mac OS X 10.0.x and 10.1.x, from the pop-up menu, selectMemory.

  5. In the 'Preferred size:' field, enter the amount of memory you'dlike to allocate to the application. The 'Minimum size:' fieldindicates the amount of free RAM needed to permit theapplication to run. You cannot change the 'Suggested size:' field.

Earlier versions of Mac OS

To allocate more memory to an application in versions of MacOS prior to OS X, follow these steps:

Select a virtual machine in the Virtual Machine Library window and click Settings. Under System Settings in the Settings window, click General. Select a cleanup option. Click Clean Up Virtual Machine. This option is only available when a Windows virtual machine has disk space to reclaim, or when any virtual machine has unconsolidated. I understand the concept of swap memory having worked on many linux machines. I ask because I've heard poor things about Mac's memory management but ever since getting a Haswell MBA I've honestly only been impressed. It has 4GB of dedicated ram which I easily fill up but then builds up virtual memory as needed. The short answer, is you do nothing. The system decides what memory gets swapped to disk and allocates space as needed. The system allocates virtual memory addresses up to 18 exabytes so that it can then swap as needed. Note: Unlike most UNIX-based operating systems, OS X does not use a preallocated disk partition for the backing store. If you are running out of RAM your Mac's drive can be used as virtual memory - so free up some storage space if you are running out of RAM. The recommendation is to keep 20% of your drive space free. Identifying the contents of a virtual machine. The space taken by VM on Mac disk mostly belongs to operating system, programs and files in Windows. To manage Windows storage go to Windows Settings System Storage. Enable Storage Sense to allow Windows automatically free up disk space. To free up space manually click 'Free up space now'.

  1. Determine how much memory is available and accessible to yourcomputer. This will give you an idea how much extra memory you canallocate to the application. From the Apple menu, select AboutThis Computer (for Mac OS 7.0 to 7.5.5, select About ThisMacintosh; for System 6, select About theFinder...).
  2. Make sure the application whose memory allocation you want toincrease is closed. Highlight the application's icon.
  3. From the File menu, select Get Info, thenMemory. (In versions before Mac OS 8.5, you only need toselect Get Info.) The application's information windowshould open.
  4. Increase the application's memory allocation. The method differsslightly between older and newer versions of the operating system:
    • In Mac OS 7.5 and later, in the information window you will see anarea labeled 'Memory Requirements'. In the 'Preferred size:' field,enter the amount of memory you'd like to allocate to the application.You cannot change the 'Suggested size:' field. The 'Minimum size:'field indicates the amount of free RAM needed to permit theapplication to run. If the 'Preferred size:' amount is unavailable, aslong as your computer has enough RAM to satisfy the minimumrequirement to run, the application will be available.
    • In Mac OS 7.1 and earlier, near the bottom of the informationwindow you will see an area labeled 'Memory'. In the 'Current size:'field, enter the amount of memory you'd like to allocate to theapplication. You cannot change the 'Suggested size:' field. Bear inmind that you will always need enough free RAM to cover the newamount, or the application will not run.
System cleanup in one click

Increase Virtual Memory Macbook

Make your Mac fast and secure with CleanMyMac X.

Few things are as frustrating as your Mac telling you it has run out of memory when you’re trying to be productive. But it’s even frustrating when you’ve ignored the problem for quite some time and your Mac’s limitations simply won’t let you put a solution on hold any longer.

  • How to get rid of low memory notifications

Usually, a popup warning isn’t the first sign that something is amiss. You may have noticed that your Mac isn’t running as fast as it used to, with the fan louder than normal as if it’s struggling to carry a heavy load up a hill.

Although Macs are wonderful computers, like any other, they have limitations. Thankfully, there is plenty you can do to resolve this problem and get your Mac operating smoothly again.

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How to Fix Your System Application Memory

Mac memory usage is often occupied by apps, even browsers like Safari or Google Chrome. In the most dire circumstances, your Mac will toss a warning at you: “your system has run out of application memory.”

Don't despair – it's solvable. The first thing to note is this is a natural issue; your Mac has a limited amount of RAM. Though more expensive Macs have more RAM, even they can butt against limitations when too many applications are running.

It may also be an app that is hogging all of your resources. This is especially true of older applications which haven’t been optimized for modern computer architecture. Websites may also be a culprit. Let’s discuss all these possibilities step by step.

How to check RAM usage on Mac

To check your RAM use on any Mac, take the following steps:

  1. Open Activity Monitor from your list of applications. You can do this in Mac’s control center, via the Finder in your Dock, or by pressing ⌘ + Space and typing Activity Monitor in the Spotlight.
  2. Toggle to the Memory pane in the Activity Monitor window

As you see in the above screenshot, Activity Monitor shows you all of your processes, sub-processes, and how much memory each is taking up. The most pertinent portion of the window is the bottom, where it shows you the total memory usage, and how it’s affecting your Mac.

A better way to monitor your Mac’s memory use is with iStat Menus. After installing the app, it makes a home in your Mac’s menu bar, and monitors just about everything, including memory, CPU, GPU, disks, and network usage.

You can choose which systems you’d like to monitor in the app itself. Only the items you’re monitoring will have an icon in your menu bar. A simple click on the menu bar icon surfaces a drop-down menu of how your Mac is performing at the time, and hovering over each graphic brings up a larger menu to inspect.

How to check CPU usage on Mac

Checking CPU use on your Mac is similar to the steps above for checking memory use. For Activity Monitor, you'd make sure to highlight the CPU section of the window. This will show you all the processes using your Mac's CPU at the time.

Similarly, iStat Menus has a CPU & GPU toggle just above the memory section. Activating that will add a CPU and GPU monitor to your Mac menu bar, which has the same interactivity as the memory icon and menu shown above.

But what creates CPU-hogging problems overall and how do they lead to slow Mac performance?

Every Mac has a processor which handles the computing of any task, from opening an app to editing photos. Processors differ in power (expressed in GHz) and efficiency (generally, newer processors are more efficient).

For example, a 9th Generation 2.2 GHz Dual-Core Intel Core i7 processor means that it has two i7 chips, each of which is able to process data at up to 2.2 GHz, and its the 9th iteration of that processor overall.

However, regardless of the power of your processor, if you throw too many tasks at it, it will start to slow because it’s trying to process too much information at once (try opening 100 Google Chrome tabs), creating a bottleneck. That’s why you can have applications not responding. So you need to do something about it.

App Tamer is perhaps the most powerful smart CPU manager out there. Not only does it show the exact CPU percentage and battery impact each process is taking from your Mac, it lets you create simple rules to prevent certain processes from hogging too much CPU.

To tame any app, just click on it in App Tamer (located in the menu bar), select “Slow down this app if it uses more than” and specify the exact CPU percentage.


How to free up memory on Mac

Knowing how to clear memory on Mac is important, especially if you have a Mac with limited resources. One option is using Activity Monitor:

  1. Open Activity Monitor on your Mac
  2. Select an app using a lot of memory
  3. Click the stop icon in the top bar

This is straightforward, but there's a better way. CleanMyMac X has an automated CPU and memory monitors built-in, which can give you a real-time view of memory usage in your Mac's menu bar. It also has a really quick and easy way to free up memory without digging through Activity Monitor and manually shutting down apps.

All you have to do is click the CleanMyMac X icon, select Free Up in the memory pane, and the app takes care of the rest! Oftentimes, it doesn't even shut apps down.

This is a quick fix, but CleanMyMac X takes it a step further in the app itself. Under the app's Maintenance section is an option to Free Up RAM, which helps you clear RAM on Mac. Once you've got this option selected, simply select Run at the bottom of the window, and CleanMyMac X will do a thorough scrubbing of your Mac's RAM, and clear unused files out of the way.

How to get rid of low memory notifications

Most apps are pretty good about how they use your Mac's resources. Having too many open or running in the background can severely limit what your Mac can handle, and is often why a Mac overheats or slows down.

Below we list a few tips to reduce high memory usage manually if you're experiencing unique warnings or issues.

Fix kernel_task, a high CPU usage bug

You may have noticed through Activity Monitor something called kernel_task absorbing a large amount of processing power. One of the functions of kernel_task is to help manage CPU temperature; you may find that your Mac fan is loud and always on, even if the device isn't hot to the touch.

That's because kernel_task usually performs this way when one or more applications are trying to use too much CPU. Unfortunately, one of the potential downsides is a Mac can overheat to such an extent that internal systems are damaged, sometimes irreparably.

Working through the following steps in this article is one way to avoid similar problems. If none of this work and kernel_task is still absorbing a high percentage of your CPU, then one or more of the following could be the cause:

  • Cooling system inefficiency
  • A failed or disconnected temperature sensor
  • Another hardware issue, including a worn out batter
  • Your System Management Controller needs a rest

If you're experiencing severe issues, Apple recommends a system management controller (SMC) reset. It's essentially a hard reset for your Mac, and should help your RAM and other hardware components start from scratch. Keep in mind you won't lose any data in this process.

Reduce memory usage in Finder

One common culprit for RAM issues is Finder, your Mac's file manager. If iStat Menus or Activity Monitor has highlighted Finder as using hundreds of MBs of RAM, there is an easy solution: change the default display for a new Finder window so it doesn't show All My Files:

  1. Click on the Finder icon in the Dock and click on the Finder menu, then select Preferences
  2. Click on General. Under 'New Finder windows show', click the dropdown menu and choose any option except All My Files
  3. Close Preferences, press Alt-Control, and click on the Finder icon in the Dock. Click Relaunch

Finder will now relaunch with new windows opening at the option you selected in step two.

Improve Chrome's Task Manager

Chrome is a popular browser, but it's a resource hog! Chrome uses a GPU Process as standard, which means it speeds up the loading of web pages, which can be great except at times when your computer is struggling with insufficient RAM.

Management

Here's how to make it better:

  1. Open Chrome on your Mac
  2. On the right side of the Chrome window, select the three-dot menu
  3. Select More tools
  4. Select Task Manager
  5. Select a Chrome process you'd like to kill
  6. Select End Process at the bottom right of the window

Here's another way to reduce Chrome's use of your Mac's memory:

Free Up Virtual Memory Mac Os

  1. Open Chrome on your Mac
  2. On the right side of the Chrome window, select the three-dot menu
  3. Select Settings
  4. Scroll to the bottom of the page and select Advanced
  5. Scroll down to System, and toggle 'Use hardware acceleration when available' off

Mac Os Memory Management

This will affect how Chrome runs on your Mac, and your experience won't be as smooth. You can also remove unused or unwanted Chrome extensions to help it use less resources on your Mac.

Get CMM X to free up space

Install CleanMyMac X and streamline the entire process of memory management on Mac. Clever memory usage control done for you.

Clean up other browsers

In every browser you use regularly, there are always going to be extensions and popups that take up space and use RAM. You can manage each one manually or use a tool such as CleanMyMac X to identify and delete them.

In the CleanMyMac X app is a section titled Extensions, which lists each extension you have for your browser or browsers. All you have to do is view the list of extensions, select the ones you no longer want, and remove them. It's really that simple!

Disable login items

Login items, browser extensions, and preference panes, such as Flash, are another common source of memory usage. Most of us have several installed that we rarely use, but which hog memory and reduce performance.

One way to do this is through System Preferences:

  1. From your Mac menu bar, select System Preferences
  2. Select Users & Groups
  3. Select Login Items
  4. Deselect items you no longer want active at login
Setting

Another way, one that is even quicker, is to employ CleanMyMac to identify and cleanup login items:

  1. Open CleanMyMac X
  2. Under Speed, select Optimization
  3. Select Login Items

You can remove all login items, or select the ones you'd like to remove individually on the right side of the window.

Disable desktop widgets

Older Macs running a version of macOS older than Catalina can disable widgets. Desktop widgets can provide a useful shortcut to apps you need to access fairly often. But they can take up processing memory that is slowing your whole Mac down. One way to close them completely is in System Preferences.

Go to Mission Control ➙ switch off the Dashboard

Declutter your desktop

Apple's built-in decluttering tool is handy for many. All you have to do on your cluttered desktop is right-click, then select Use Stacks. This places all of your desktop files into folders unique to their filetype, like Screenshots and Images.

A better way is to use Spotless, an app that gives you far more control over how your Mac is organized. It has several triggers for automated cleanup of files on your desktop, placing them wherever you see fit. It's particularly useful for power users who produce several files daily, but don't want to take the time to place each in a respective folder.

Increase virtual memory mac

You can also select many files on your Mac desktop, and tell Spotless to tidy them up. You always have full control!

Schedule regular cleanups

Constant use of your Mac, or leaving it on all the time, will slow it down over time. Shutting it down and restarting is a traditional way of 'cleaning up' a computer.

We also like CleanMyMac X's scheduled cleanup feature. Telling the app when you'd like to perform a thorough cleaning up of your Mac's system is a method many prefer to shutting down and restarting often. It has the upshot of removing files and folders you no longer use, and cleaning up tasks that are slowing your Mac down behind the scenes. A simple shutdown may not do this.

Keeping your Mac in tip-top shape is critical. While we'd all like to think computers are brilliant little devices that can handle anything, they need some care, too.

All of the apps mentioned in this article help with taking care of your Mac, and protecting your investment. Best of all they're each free as part of a seven day trial of Setapp. Give it a try today!

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