I have a 2008 20" iMac 2.66 Core2Duo with 2 GB of ram, a 3TB hard drive and 
10.11.4 and sometimes it is dog slow. I can get 6 GB of ram used for about $70 
on eBay and am thinking that might help.

The modern Internet uses a phenomenal amount of resources just to view it. 
Firefox wants 1+ gig of ram usually but works better after a regular restart of 
the browser (of course if I closed half of those 2000 open tabs it might help!)

The latest version of Safari shows ram usage for each tab and for some reason 
when I open a simple Yahoo search it suddenly wants 2 gigs just for that tab 
and here comes the beachball! 

I know ram is MY problem as whenever something suddenly slows down I try to get 
to the Activity Monitor - Memory window and find Firefox wants more ram than 
I've got! And of course it is trying to swap to hard drive to make it all fit 
which is where the beachball comes in...

Adobe Flash is another thing, nearly unusable, allow it to start and suddenly 
Firefox wants an ADDITIONAL 2 gigs of ram! No way!

Most everything else works pretty well, even old iMovie 8 from 2010.

Russell Courtenay

Sent from my iPhone

> On May 5, 2016, at 9:28 PM, GMail Valter Psicof <valter.psi...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> Il giorno 05/05/16 23.07, "Eric B. Volker" ha scritto:
> 
>> I still get the beachball fairly often.
> This sounds obvious but, how much Ram do you have?
> If it's 2 GB or less, I strongly suggest to upgrade to 3 or - better - 4 GB.
> 
> 2 GB are fairly cheap nowadays, and it's often the most "bang for your buck"
> upgrade available.
> 
>> I¹m not complaining - it¹s
>> amazing that this thing can still run the latest OS.
> Which OSX version are you using?
> I think you know that, usually, the newer the OS, the slower it is.
> If I were you, I wouldn't go past 10.9 on your iMac.
> 
> I have an Early 2009 iMac, and I'm still mainly using OSX 10.6 because it's
> the more stable and faster on this machine.
> On a secondary partition I have OSX 10.9, for instances where I need to use
> some newer app. 
> 
> 
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