There are several programs in usr bin that end in stat that are better for
scripting and screen readers not sure what understands the current system. I
used to use vmstat and memstat quite a bit. I would check but my computer
resources are being used by others.
Jonathan Cohn
> On Sep 28, 20
from what I've read memory is very hard to measure in the new system.
Not only do you have the usual virtual memory/swap but there is also now
compressed memory so what's free and used is even more murky. About Tech
has a brief explainer on compressed memory:
http://macs.about.com/od/macoperat
Activity Monitor is a great app built into all Macs. Open it up, go to the
toolbar and then into the view group, and choose the memory button. Get out of
the toolbar and you can see not only a table of all your apps and how much
memory each uses, but stats on your memory as a whole.
> On Sep 28,
is there another way to see this info then? i could go the top route but unix
and top and memory flat out confuse me.
> On Sep 28, 2015, at 4:59 AM, Alex Hall wrote:
>
> That one has been broken since Yosemite. I meant to fix it, but other
> projects kept coming up. Plus, from what I've read,
That one has been broken since Yosemite. I meant to fix it, but other projects
kept coming up. Plus, from what I've read, ram is handled so differently in
Yosemite and onward that monitoring it isn't as important as it used to be.
> On Sep 28, 2015, at 02:57, deedra waters wrote:
>
> This scrip
This script seems to not work i gave it a key in the keyboard commander but it
says nothing when i use that keystroke any thoughts?
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