Macintosh has a series of portables like MacBook, MacBook Pro & MacBook Air- the Macintosh notebook computer-is one among the popular computers used by Mac users for convenience and portability. But according to many user reports, MacBook users might sometimes experience random freezes while working. Earlier, the similar kind of problems have been addressed by Apple by the release of firmware update, but the issues seem not to be fixed.
They still persist and can necessitate the use of Mac Recovery tools, let's see how. The pattern of freezes doesn't seem to be uniform. Reportedly, the current problems are more serious and can occur to any MacBook, after which the system might become unrecoverable.
The nature of freezing is unpredictable and your MacBook might freeze at any point of time. Though, no exact cause has been determined yet, but the issue seem to lie somewhere between software setup problems to firmware incompatibility issues. Some of the possible workarounds to troubleshoot this behavior are described underneath:
MacBook freezing problems might root from some incompatibile third-party extensions. To check if this is the cause, you can boot your Mac in Safe Mode that prevents these objects to start at boot.
You should also check the software setup while running in Safe Mode. To do so, try removing the applications one at a time and then see if this brings any affect. Most of such problems have been reported to occur with applications that use network resources to synchronize with. A user account can also cause application-related problems, so create a new account and test the software. If the problem continues, try reinstalling the applications.
You can check the drive SMART status with Disk Utility.
Sometimes, running maintenance scripts and removing system caches can solve this kind of problems. Also, you can also reapply the recent 'Combo' updater for your Mac OS X.
As the last resort, you should perform Mac Recovery actions like, downgrading to an earlier Mac OS X version, run 'Archive and Install', or repartition and reformat the hard drive. To restore the deleted data, you need to use your previous backup or run a Mac File Recovery utility
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