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Mary--d

macrumors newbie
Original poster
Jun 14, 2014
1
0
Every time I want to run Ccleaner on my mac It's flipping out. When I run "Cleaner" it takes about 250% cpu. My laptop is almost melting after a few seconds. So every time I quit the process because I'm scared my computer will crash. Do you have an idea why this is happening and how I can fix it?
 

Shrink

macrumors G3
Feb 26, 2011
8,929
1,727
New England, USA
Every time I want to run Ccleaner on my mac It's flipping out. When I run "Cleaner" it takes about 250% cpu. My laptop is almost melting after a few seconds. So every time I quit the process because I'm scared my computer will crash. Do you have an idea why this is happening and how I can fix it?

I'm not being facetious...the solution is not to use the Cleaner.

Your Mac will take care of itself, and it's my understanding that additional apps are unnecessary.:)
 

GGJstudios

macrumors Westmere
May 16, 2008
44,545
943
Every time I want to run Ccleaner on my mac It's flipping out. When I run "Cleaner" it takes about 250% cpu. My laptop is almost melting after a few seconds. So every time I quit the process because I'm scared my computer will crash. Do you have an idea why this is happening and how I can fix it?
I recommend you fix it by completely uninstalling Ccleaner. You don't need "cleaner" or "maintenance" apps to keep your Mac running well, and some of these apps can do more harm than good. Most only remove files/folders or unused languages or architectures, which does nothing more than free up some drive space, with the risk of deleting something important in the process.
These apps will not make your Mac run faster or more efficiently, since having stuff stored on a drive does not impact performance, unless you're running out of drive space. In fact, deleting some caches can hurt performance, rather than help it, since more system resources are used and performance suffers while each cache is being rebuilt.
Many of these tasks should only be done selectively to troubleshoot specific problems, not en masse as routine maintenance. OS X does a good job of taking care of itself, without the need for 3rd party software. Among other things, it has its own maintenance scripts that run silently in the background on a daily, weekly and monthly basis, without user intervention.
 
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