When i boot up i get the spinning wheel on my mac osx for a very long time. I recently uninstalled a plugin and i think i may have uninstalled some things i should not have in the process. What can i do help my mac boot up properly?
Comments
Well, Plan A: put back what you took out, and try again. Plan
Well,
Plan A: put back what you took out, and try again.
Plan B: Boot up from an archived back up. Time Machine is one such option
Plan C: Going strictly on the limited info provided - Boot up and reinstall the Mac OS from the Disk
Plan D: Back up any important session work, wipe the drive clean and reinstall everything.
Plan E: Well, really, if you've gotten this far without any success, you're in deeper trouble because Plan E involves opening up your wallet.
It seems unlikely that simply removing a plug-in would affect an
It seems unlikely that simply removing a plug-in would affect anything across the entire system. Weirdness can also be sign your internal Lithium battery might be losing some start-up data if the machine is of a certain age.
But, Even before Plan A, if you haven't already - clear your parameter RAM.
1) Do a Restart and as soon as it goes black press and hold down all four of these keys at once [ Command (Apple)] [Option] [P] [R].
2) Keep holding the keys down.
3) The machine will partially start up, play the start-up chime, and re-boot again. It's OK to let it do this a couple times before you release the keys. Done.
This is one of those things that may/or may not help, but it can't hurt. It clears a little cache of start-up parameters. If it resets your clock, I'd be especially suspicious of the Lithium battery.
[[url=http://[/URL]="http://support.appl…"]Apple Support Doc.[/]="http://support.appl…"]Apple Support Doc.[/]
To help us pin point things. in the process of trying to uninsta
To help us pin point things. in the process of trying to uninstall the plug in i thought id delete other files and documents i didnt think i needed thinking it would speed up the mac. I think i deleted something i shouldnt have. This is when i started getting the problem.
I have done most of these recommended steps but i am still getting the wheel and my computer freezes up when i try to use the time machine.
Thank you so much for your time - I am a moron i know
Progress is made through errors. As I tell my horn students and
Progress is made through errors. As I tell my horn students and colleagues, we learn more (about ourselves and the mechanics of playing) on the days when everything is NOT going well than we do when thing work effortlessly.
Unless you have the Mac version of System Restore I think you are in for a reformat.
thatjeffguy, post: 355876 wrote: A simple solution would be to d
thatjeffguy, post: 355876 wrote: A simple solution would be to download from Apple the appropriate "combo updater" for your system version and install it. It won't disturb any of your files but will likely put back whatever might be missing.
Jeff
I think yes to this as well. Thanks for the tip dvdhawk! I've never done this. Could it also be insuficiant memory and you've installed something that is requiring more ram at startup, that is lost as well? So then dvdhawks suggestion and thatjeffguy are both heading in the right direction?
What goes up, must come down.... spinning wheels, round and round. Same though TheJackAttack!
:wink:
audiokid, post: 355877 wrote: I think yes to this as well. Thank
audiokid, post: 355877 wrote: I think yes to this as well. Thanks for the tip dvdhawk! I've never done this.
Purging the P-RAM was a lot more common back in OS 7, and became increasingly less necessary with each OS since. But it's a good first response housekeeping step if you notice anything at all odd about your mac's behavior.
ccking,
You should have a System Restore or Update that will bail you out. It's highly unlikely you would have to do a complete reformat. If you can't update the OS that way, you might have another option. Do you have any other macs running the same version of OSX? If so, you can always hook the two together in "target mode" and compare System Folders / Libraries / Extensions and see what's missing from the areas you were poking around in removing files.
To start the non-healthy machine in "target mode":
Start the working machine first.
With the non-healthy machine still off, connect the two via firewire
Start up the non-healthy machine while holding down the [T] key
You'll see the Firewire icon on the screen of the non-healthy machine and it's drive will be mounted on the desktop of the working machine just like an external drive.
Then it's an exercise in comparing the working OS to the non-working OS.
Mac peoples? Feel free to chime in.
Mac peoples? Feel free to chime in.