Third Party Utilities For Mac
From built-in tools like Disk Utility, Network Utility and Console to third-party tools like DiskWarrior, FileSalvage and iStumbler, these items help get the job done. Mac OS X Built In Utilities.
But, thanks to the modularity of the Linux desktop, you could actually run a different desktop environment’s file manager on your current desktop. For example, GNOME and Ubuntu’s Unity desktop include the. KDE includes the Dolphin file manager, Xfce includes the Thunar file manager, and LXDE includes PCManFM. Each file manager has its own unique features — for example, Xfce’s Thunar file manager includes an integrated Bulk Rename tool for quickly batch-renaming files.
As others have said one person's experience is not generalizable and I speak only for myself (and my very young son whose computer I maintain.) Perhaps my computer would have recovered performance on its own or a quick lesson from a power user would have worked better. I promise to post again if there is trouble. So far, Clean My Mac 3 works a treat and I am grateful for it. I hope my experience is useful to the OP. Outlook for mac crashes when sending email.
Third Party Disk Utility For Mac
When it comes to diagnosing and resolving problems with their computers, most Mac users rely on Disk Utility and the tools that come with Mac OS X. Disk Utility can resolve a number of problems—such as damaged hard drive directory structures and permissions problems with Mac OS X’s system files. However, Disk Utility doesn’t provide overly extensive hard drive repair and management options and it doesn’t provide any data-recovery features. Also, the tools found in Mac OS X’s Utilities folder don’t include extensive diagnostic tools. The limited capabilities of the tools that ship with Mac OS X can be augmented with a number of utilities offering advanced disk management, diagnostic, and repair capabilities. The five tools profiled here each have own particular strengths, but they all offer much greater chances of diagnosing, recovering from, and preventing major hardware, hard drive, or operating system problems.
So there are there are a handful of “cleaners,” 'doctors,' 'tune-ups,' etc that are useful: TechTool Pro (which at one time was part of the Apple Care package) and the aforementioned CleanMyMac2 being the more bang for your buck ones. Third, if you like me have moved your files form Mac to Mac over the years you are going to have files that will cause weird behavior in the OS. CleanMyMac2 was able to find an old OS X extension I didn't even known I still had and it removeal stopped some really flaky behavior of the OS. CleanMyMac2 doesn't do 'damage' as long as you use it intelligently.
Get unlimited access to videos, live online training, learning paths, books, interactive tutorials, and more.
Very annoying - and really cool that ASM fixes it. I wish one developer would take all these nifty little utilities like ASM, TrashX, Fruit Menu, WindowShadeX, etc. And roll them in to one application/utility.
I having been using Clean My Mac 2 for a few months and accepted the free upgrade to Clean My Mac 3. It works well for me and my son and I am happy with my purchase. Since it hasn't been very long, I will post again if there seems to be trouble. The upgrade has several new features and I am just getting around to trying them. When I downloaded it I did so following the advice in an ebook called.