Interesting. Maybe they finally fixed it. Can you check in "About This Mac" and then "More Info" and note what model it reports? Would be nice to finally say that Mac Minis after xyz date no longer have this issue.

CB

On 11/27/12 10:13 AM, Kliphton Miller wrote:
0, zilch, noda,  no busy in any app that I have ran.  Now like I said, I had it 
custom built, with 1TB of SSD, 16 gigs of ram, 2.6 I7 quad core processor.  So 
maybe these extra specks help out a great deal?

Kliphton.A.M
(Email&iMessage) [email protected]
(Twitter&Skype) kliphton72
http://kliphton.wordpress.com
http:/facebook.com/kliphandsharrie
Sent from my iPhone5

On Nov 27, 2012, at 8:49 AM, "Ricardo Walker" <[email protected]> wrote:

Hi,

So, you have had no attack of the busies while using Safari or iTunes for 
example?

Ricardo Walker
[email protected]
Twitter:@apple2thecore
www.appletothecore.info

On Nov 27, 2012, at 9:16 AM, Kliphton Miller <[email protected]> wrote:

Okay, I don't know if this is because I had my mini custom built, that this 
might make a difference.  But I have no monitor hooked up, no HDMI or VGA cable 
hooked up, and I experience no lag in my system what so ever.  I have the 
latest model, the one that apple just released late October of this year.  I 
did have to hook it up to a monitor for anishal setup, but after setup was 
complete, I unplugged it from the monitor, and moved it to another room, and 
have had no issues.


Kliphton.A.M
(Email&iMessage) [email protected]
(Twitter&Skype) kliphton72
http://kliphton.wordpress.com
http:/facebook.com/kliphandsharrie
Sent from my iPhone5

On Nov 26, 2012, at 10:12 PM, "Mike Arrigo" <[email protected]> wrote:

Ok, let's try this. Again, go to your utilities folder and open activity 
monitor. Is anything in there consuming a large amount of processor resources? 
Sometimes left over print jobs can do this.
On Nov 26, 2012, at 3:29 PM, Kristeen Hughes <[email protected]> wrote:

Hello Mike and all,
As you suggested, Mike, I opened up system information.app and my Mac Mini 
shows that it has a monitor connected. It's the same monitor that was connected 
before I tried running without one. I am totally at a loss. Today when I 
rebooted the system it ran even poorer than it did yesterday. Even with just 
finder running, it is slow and the speech can't say a single sentence without 
breaking up.

Kristeen

On Nov 26, 2012, at 3:35 PM, Chris Blouch <[email protected]> wrote:

This was my conclusion as well and in my old post I provided links to some 
wiring schematics to make a VGA terminator. All the places I could find which 
sold VGA terminators seem to no longer have them in stock. The sense pins 
indicate what resolution the connected display is running and my assumption was 
that with nothing connected the Mac polls continually for that information but 
never gets it. It's hard to tell whether this happens at a hardware level or 
some other API call which fails to return quickly because it is waiting on the 
sense pin results which never come.

CB

On 11/26/12 11:54 AM, - wrote:
It is interesting that a monitor without power previntes the mac system 
slowdown. This sounds as though the mac does a form of a ping to query from 
time to time what is attached. If it doesn't recieve a return signal instantly 
it does it again and/or waits for a determined time before allowing an 
application to resume activity.

If this is the case, any return signal is not being generated by the monitor 
but the circuit is made at the socket and passes it back to the mac. It would 
then in principle be possible to find the wire pairs in the vga socket and make 
the return circuit absent a monitor.

XB
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