- Joined
- Mar 18, 2019
- Messages
- 197
- Lightroom Experience
- Intermediate
- Lightroom Version
- 5.x
- Lightroom Version
- LR 12.4
- Operating System
- macOS 13 Ventura
Conrad wrote the following below last April And only now am I getting to it (sorry!). I want to ask about this comment:
If you are experiencing a slowdown, keep Activity Monitor open and specifically look first at two of the tabs: CPU (sorted by % CPU, in descending order), and Memory (sorted by Memory column, in descending order).
Got it.
With those sort orders, the applications and other processes using the most CPU or memory at that moment will be at the top of the lists. You can control how often it checks by choosing View > Update Frequency.
Use that info together with the displays at the bottom of the Activity Monitor window. At the bottom of the CPU tab, if there is a significant percentage of Idle CPU usage, then the Mac is not completely busy and it almost doesn’t matter what the listing above says because there is still spare power. If that is what it looks like during a slowdown, then maybe CPU usage is not the problem. But, if Idle is close to 0% and the graph is full, then you do want to look in the list and see which applications are hogging your processor. For an application to really slow things down, its CPU usage will be well over 100% (macOS measures 100% per core, so a fully used CPU on a 4-core Mac would show close to 400% CPU usage.)
I'm not sure about this. I have included two captures of the Activity Monitor displaying CPU. (BTW recently , the issue has been I take an action in LR and 5-10 seconds and then LR responds) What do you see when you look at these? Because I'm not sure
Similarly, at the bottom of the Memory tab, if Memory Pressure is green, then the numbers in the list above don’t mean much because the overall memory load on the Mac is still very low and not a problem. However, if you see Memory Pressure stay in the orange or red zones (full graph) for a long time, then the Mac definitely doesn’t have enough memory for what it’s doing, and it might help to quit some applications or close some browser tabs.
I've included another display this time of Memory.
If both CPU and Memory look great when you have a slowdown, then the bottleneck could be something else; the next areas to look at might be graphics hardware or storage speed.
Also, what kind of Mac hardware are you using? In general, the older Intel-based Macs may struggle more with the advanced features in today’s photo software, with more lags and more heat and fan noise. The newer Apple Silicon Macs are a lot more efficient, and mine (a base model M1 Pro MacBook Pro, 32GB memory) seems to crank through all kinds of work without complaining much. There are times when I have multiple applications open for layout (InDesign, Photoshop, Lightroom Classic), and other times when I run multiple applications for video editing (Premiere Pro, After Effects, Photoshop), and it all seems to run just great with Mail and Safari also up in the background.
I have an M1 iMac.
The last thing I can think of doing to reduce slow down time and the BBBD is switching from Opera to Safari.
If you are experiencing a slowdown, keep Activity Monitor open and specifically look first at two of the tabs: CPU (sorted by % CPU, in descending order), and Memory (sorted by Memory column, in descending order).
Got it.
With those sort orders, the applications and other processes using the most CPU or memory at that moment will be at the top of the lists. You can control how often it checks by choosing View > Update Frequency.
Use that info together with the displays at the bottom of the Activity Monitor window. At the bottom of the CPU tab, if there is a significant percentage of Idle CPU usage, then the Mac is not completely busy and it almost doesn’t matter what the listing above says because there is still spare power. If that is what it looks like during a slowdown, then maybe CPU usage is not the problem. But, if Idle is close to 0% and the graph is full, then you do want to look in the list and see which applications are hogging your processor. For an application to really slow things down, its CPU usage will be well over 100% (macOS measures 100% per core, so a fully used CPU on a 4-core Mac would show close to 400% CPU usage.)
I'm not sure about this. I have included two captures of the Activity Monitor displaying CPU. (BTW recently , the issue has been I take an action in LR and 5-10 seconds and then LR responds) What do you see when you look at these? Because I'm not sure
Similarly, at the bottom of the Memory tab, if Memory Pressure is green, then the numbers in the list above don’t mean much because the overall memory load on the Mac is still very low and not a problem. However, if you see Memory Pressure stay in the orange or red zones (full graph) for a long time, then the Mac definitely doesn’t have enough memory for what it’s doing, and it might help to quit some applications or close some browser tabs.
I've included another display this time of Memory.
If both CPU and Memory look great when you have a slowdown, then the bottleneck could be something else; the next areas to look at might be graphics hardware or storage speed.
Also, what kind of Mac hardware are you using? In general, the older Intel-based Macs may struggle more with the advanced features in today’s photo software, with more lags and more heat and fan noise. The newer Apple Silicon Macs are a lot more efficient, and mine (a base model M1 Pro MacBook Pro, 32GB memory) seems to crank through all kinds of work without complaining much. There are times when I have multiple applications open for layout (InDesign, Photoshop, Lightroom Classic), and other times when I run multiple applications for video editing (Premiere Pro, After Effects, Photoshop), and it all seems to run just great with Mail and Safari also up in the background.
I have an M1 iMac.
The last thing I can think of doing to reduce slow down time and the BBBD is switching from Opera to Safari.