On Friday, February 28, 2003, at 12:33 PM, Jack Russell wrote: > > and run "repair disk permissions" . > > There are a number of maintenance chron jobs that Unix does on a time > interval basis. Daily, weekly and monthly. These are set up to happen > in the early morning hours. This is ideal for a server that is on > 24/7/365. If you shut your computer off at night? These chron jobs > never get run. Download MacJanitor from version tracker (shareware) > and then you can run them on command. > > Just the disk utility and the cron jobs will clear up system crud, if > that is the problem. If that doesn't do it, you'll need to get with a > service tech with detailed information about your exact configuration, > what you're running when it happens, is it repeatable, or does it occur > at random? > > Good luck, > Jack Russell > > > -- >
Hi Jack, the programs running all the time are Mail and Safari, I already used MacJanitor 3 times, but it seems that that doesn't make any difference. I live the computer run one night a week so the internal program can do its job. What else can you soggest? Hector -- G-List is sponsored by <http://lowendmac.com/> and... Small Dog Electronics http://www.smalldog.com | Refurbished Drives | -- We have Apple Refurbished Monitors in stock! | & CDRWs on Sale! | Support Low End Mac <http://lowendmac.com/lists/support.html> G-List list info: <http://lowendmac.com/lists/g-list.shtml> --> AOL users, remove "mailto:" Send list messages to: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To unsubscribe, email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> For digest mode, email: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subscription questions: <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Archive: <http://www.mail-archive.com/g-list%40mail.maclaunch.com/> Using a Mac? Free email & more at Applelinks! http://www.applelinks.com