- #MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 HOW TO#
- #MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 UPGRADE#
- #MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 FULL#
- #MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 PRO#
- #MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 SERIES#
Start using your Mac the way it was designed to be used.fast and no waiting. So when your Mac runs out of ram and pages to the SSD (uses the SSD as RAM) then it does not slow down, because an SSD is really like a big RAM drive! That's why I (and you) can get away with 8GB of RAM. The SSD is also made from flash chips that are almost as fast as the RAM. The SSD knows where it all your data is instantaneously. With an SSD, there is no waiting, this is because your data is effectively in a spreadsheet. A traditional hard drive is like a record player, when you send data from the HDD to the CPU the computer has to find it, it hunts around the platters looking for all the data. It is not the raw speed of the SSD, it is how it works. I dont have to wait for the CPU to catch up, there is no spinning beachball, there is no lag. I edited the images for this article in Photoshop, uploaded them to our server using Cyberduck, and I'm running Mail and Excel in the background. I'm running two browsers (Firefox and Chrome.
#MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 PRO#
I am typing this article on a 2010 Macbook Pro with 8GB of RAM and a 500GB SSD drive.
#MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 UPGRADE#
A RAM upgrade is easy, a Mac SSD upgrade is a bit harder, but with this guide you'll be an expert with all the knowledge to make an SSD upgrade simple.įor general use, most modern Macbooks have enough CPU power. Replace it with an SSD, and the speed increase is incredible. The second bottleneck is your the hard drive. (Did you expect that bit of truth from the Mac memory upgrade guys?) You really only need 8GB and an SSD for a super speedy Mac. If it is a choice between 16GB and an SSD, choose an SSD. You need at least 8GB of RAM for the current macOS. Applications will open quicker, starting up is snappy, and the overall result is extending the life of your Mac.įirst bottleneck is RAM. Fix both and you can make your Mac run like new. There are two speed bottlenecks in a Macbook Pro notebook.
#MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 HOW TO#
#MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 SERIES#
The new M series processors are a harbinger that the time for such a change is approaching sooner than later. I am aware that eventually, I will have to break down and buy a new MBP. While the new MBPs are lighter and have longer battery life, they hold little performance edge over this machine in my day to day use of the machine as INTEL has done little to really advance processors in a meaningful way over the years since this machine was designed. This machine is fast, reliable and delight to use. The logic board nor the display on this machine have ever faltered. I upgraded the machine to Big Sur using a popular patching program along with an upgrade to the latest Broadcom WiFi/BT card (thanks to an enterprising young man) and am running 11.2 currently with no issues outside the ones that are plaguing even the newest MBPs. Both fans have been replaced and most recently I replaced the right side speakers as the woofer section had started to rattle. I have replaced the keyboard only ONCE in that entire time. The 1TB HDD is still used as an in-machine Time Machine drive for Big Sur. I upgraded to 1TB SSD and a 1TB HDD and moved to APFS once Catalina came along using the HDD as an in-machine daily clone backup drive (used SuperDuper until Big Sur negated the ability to easily create a bootable clone). I upgraded the SSD to a larger one and rolled the SSD and HDD into a FUSION drive using the tools apple made available to anyone comfortable with the command line, which I ran with zero issues for several years. I swapped out the super drive (CD/DVD burner) for an SSD (initially a relatively small one to just hold the OS). I upgraded the HDD several times (started life as a 256MB HDD).
#MACBOOK PRO USER GUIDE 2012 FULL#
This machine has a full compliment of ports with NO dongles needed! I upgraded the ram over time to its max 16GB. This machine was the last of the totally user repairable notebooks Apple made. Without question, a fine example of solid engineering. My daughter gave me this machine as a christmas present in late 2012. I am among those still using a mid 2012 non-retina 15" MBP.