F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems MacOS resource consumption appears inconsistent, making it hard to determine if it's typical or excessive.

MacOS resource consumption appears inconsistent, making it hard to determine if it's typical or excessive.

MacOS resource consumption appears inconsistent, making it hard to determine if it's typical or excessive.

E
Enyx
Junior Member
7
06-02-2016, 03:49 AM
#1
You're experiencing elevated RAM usage during startup, which is unusual for a typical system. With 32GB of RAM, 35-38% usage could indicate background processes, background apps, or system services consuming memory. Since you've disabled app launch on boot to save memory, this might be normal behavior. However, if the usage remains consistently high, consider checking for unnecessary background tasks or optimizing startup settings further.
E
Enyx
06-02-2016, 03:49 AM #1

You're experiencing elevated RAM usage during startup, which is unusual for a typical system. With 32GB of RAM, 35-38% usage could indicate background processes, background apps, or system services consuming memory. Since you've disabled app launch on boot to save memory, this might be normal behavior. However, if the usage remains consistently high, consider checking for unnecessary background tasks or optimizing startup settings further.

S
Selo_Uzumaki
Member
148
06-07-2016, 06:01 AM
#2
Macs manage memory uniquely compared to Windows, meaning the same logic doesn’t work on Apple devices. macOS stores data aggressively in memory and can keep applications running even when closed, leading to high usage without visible programs. In truth, when you open something you’ve cached, pressure won’t increase because it was already present. Instead of focusing solely on total memory usage, check the memory "pressure" in Activity Monitor for a clearer understanding of available space.
S
Selo_Uzumaki
06-07-2016, 06:01 AM #2

Macs manage memory uniquely compared to Windows, meaning the same logic doesn’t work on Apple devices. macOS stores data aggressively in memory and can keep applications running even when closed, leading to high usage without visible programs. In truth, when you open something you’ve cached, pressure won’t increase because it was already present. Instead of focusing solely on total memory usage, check the memory "pressure" in Activity Monitor for a clearer understanding of available space.

H
HeyimEve
Member
65
06-27-2016, 12:33 AM
#3
Thank you for the input. I wasn't aware of Apple's approach to memory management. I'll need to explore this further.
H
HeyimEve
06-27-2016, 12:33 AM #3

Thank you for the input. I wasn't aware of Apple's approach to memory management. I'll need to explore this further.

O
OffsetBadge
Member
191
06-27-2016, 05:17 AM
#4
Shifted to Linux, macOS and all platforms excluding Windows
O
OffsetBadge
06-27-2016, 05:17 AM #4

Shifted to Linux, macOS and all platforms excluding Windows

C
Casper_KS
Member
113
06-27-2016, 09:32 PM
#5
If you have memory available, macOS will make use of it. If you're worried, add Activity Monitor to your startup items and once it opens up click ram. If the memory pressure turns red, then yes. Something is wrong, if not don't worry about it too much
C
Casper_KS
06-27-2016, 09:32 PM #5

If you have memory available, macOS will make use of it. If you're worried, add Activity Monitor to your startup items and once it opens up click ram. If the memory pressure turns red, then yes. Something is wrong, if not don't worry about it too much