Mac Shutdown Error
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Kernel Panic Mac Won't Boot
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Kernel Panic Mac El Capitan
How to Fix a Mac that won't shut down My Mac won't shut down: how to fix an Apple Mac that doesn't switch off Discover how to fix an Apple Mac that won't shut down. This feature explores bugs that keep Mac OS X from turning off. by Lucy Hattersley | 10 Feb 15 Share Tweet Send Hi. I saw this on Macworld UK and thought you should see it too. Comments mac keeps restarting over and over Help! My Mac won't shut down. How do I turn off an Apple Mac, and what happens if my Mac won't shut down properly. Mac OS X features a handy menu option for turning off the Mac. Just choose Apple > Shut Down and click Shut Down. You can snipe the confirmation message by holding down. Command while choosing Shut Down. Wait until all apps close, and the Mac shuts down. At least that's the theory. In truth switching off an Apple Mac can sometimes be a real pain. In this feature we look at how to switch off an Apple Mac, and what to do if an Apple Mac doesn't shut down properly. See also: 10 steps to take when your Mac won't start upand5 steps (and 8 checks) to help fix a frozen Mac How to shut down an Apple Mac: give it time The first thing to do is simply give your Mac a bit of time. Sometimes shutting down can be a long process as OS X sorts through its open files and closes all of the programs. This is especially true if you have a lot of programs and documents open. All of this should take longer than a minute, but time goes slowly when you're staring at a screen waiting
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Mac Your Computer Restarted Because Of A Problem Loop
Networking Productivity Software Smartwatches Storage Styluses Mac 911 Mac Gems MacOS Hints macbook pro constantly restarting Mac 101 Working Mac Get more out of your Mac with productivity tips and tricks Follow @macworldbiz Home OS your computer restarted because of a problem mac el capitan X How to troubleshoot a kernel panic Comments Joe Kissell | @joekissell Senior Contributor, Macworld Feb 6, 2013 3:30 AM Most crashes on a Mac affect just one application. But you http://www.macworld.co.uk/how-to/mac-software/fix-mac-that-wont-shut-down-3597343/ may encounter a type of system-wide crash that brings down your entire Mac: a kernel panic. When this occurs, there’s no warning and no way to save your work or do anything else without restarting. And, because kernel panics can have many different causes, diagnosing the problem and preventing its recurrence are difficult. How do you know if it’s a kernel panic? If http://www.macworld.com/article/2027201/how-to-troubleshoot-a-kernel-panic.html you’re running OS X 10.7 Lion or earlier, kernel panics usually result in your screen dimming from top to bottom, and a message appearing in several languages telling you that you must restart your Mac (by holding down the power button for several seconds to turn it off, and then pressing it again to turn it back on). Up through Lion, a kernel panic looked like this (on an otherwise unresponsive screen). Starting in OS X 10.8 Mountain Lion, OS X automatically restarts when you have a kernel panic, and then displays a similar-looking message for 60 seconds (or until you press a key) telling you that your Mac was restarted because of a problem. (If the kernel panic repeats every time your Mac restarts, OS X will give up after five tries and shut your Mac down.) As Apple notes on its support page about kernel panics, something as random and fleeting as malformed network packets can potentially cause a kernel panic. So, if you experience this problem just once, or only rarely, just restart, get back to work, and forget about it. In Mount
remain constant. If you know of a category of errors that are not included here, please let me know. error -32768 svTempDisable: Temporarily disable card but run primary init. error -32640 svDisabled: Reserve http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs/user/lenzo/html/mac_errors.html range -32640 to -32768 for Apple temp disables. error -32615 fontNotOutlineErr: bitmap font passed to routine that does outlines only error -23048 outOfMemory: Not enough memory is available to issue the needed DNR query or to build the DNR cache. error -23047 dnrErr: The domain name server has returned an error. error -23046 noAnsErr: None of the known name servers are responding. error -23045 authNameErr: The domain name does not exist. error -23044 noNameServer: No name server kernel panic can be found for the specified name string. error -23043 noResultProc: No result procedure is passed to the address translation call when the resolver must be used to find the address. error -23042 cacheFault: The name specified cannot be found in the cache. The domain name resolver will now query the domain name server and return the answer in the callback procedure. error -23041 nameSyntaxErr: The <