![]() However, I took out a MacBook Air (13-inch, Mid 2014) and started installing apps on it (sort of in similar fashion to my updating apps on the Early 2015 13-inch MacBook Pro) and found that, while that machine's fans did ramp up a lot it was to nowhere near as crazy or as constant of a degree.Ĭonsidering this is the last USB-A equipped Intel MacBook Pro to be able to run macOS Monterey in the fall, I'd like to keep it going for as long as I can. I would've just figured that this is normal considering that x86-64 computers all generally roll this way and that Apple's do especially given the thinness factor. And, again, I'm specifically saying with "updating" these things rather than doing any thing intensive in them. ![]() I've long noticed that simple things like updating Mac App Store apps, updating Microsoft 365 Apps (Microsoft Office via subscription and not installed via the Mac App Store), updating Blizzard games, updating Chrome and VLC, that all of these things cause the fans to ramp up like crazy only dying down once I've stopped running those things. Currently, it's running a fully patched and up-to-date installation of macOS Crapalina (10.15.7) with all current Safari and Security Updated having been applied. It's got the 3.1GHz 5th Generation (Broadwell) Core i7, 16GB of RAM and a 512GB SSD. I currently own a MacBook Pro (Retina, 13-inch, Early 2015).
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