![]() ![]() Or simple checks to be performed that will tell me if there are problems? And realized that I should probably delete after reading through the community here, so I simply drag the application to the trash and deleted from the Recycle Bin? Is this all I need to do? Im not sure how many RAM I have used or something like that. I started noticing that the mac is pretty slow, it has so many applications and files, screenshots, documents and downloads, I managed to sort downloads and put them in the trash can manually but it has not seemed to have made any difference at all. Now, I use my Mac for the research I am now doing some GCSE and have more time for games I used to play a LOT of downloadable games online and spent a lot of time on the game forums and work of moderator for some of them. See the difference it makes to total power consumption.Hello, so I would first start by saying that I am no computer or the apple guru, I am aware of the basic information of base etc, but nothing close to tip at all. Update : And this is the difference it makes installing that kill command : Installed the “killall corespeechd” script on Jan 19. I’d like to kill it forever, but I see no way of doing that. The solution? Well, I don’t want to reboot the machine all the time, so I created an entry in Lingon X to killall corespeechd once a day. Remarkably, I have all speech-related functionality switched off, but it still does this. Today, it consumed around 130% of a CPU, constantly. ![]() Now, looking at the processes, one process sticks out, the “corespeechd”. See the graph of total power consumption to see the problem: Total power consumption over time. If you wait long enough, it starts consuming power like crazy. I’ve got a new Mac Mini, and it has a gloriously low power consumption. Example command line (all on one line): /Applications/.app/Contents/Frameworks/Transcode.app ~/Documents/Zoom/\ 16.30.10\ Martin\ Wehlou's\ Zoom\ Meeting\ 94043638090/double_click_to_convert_01.zoom Author martin Posted on Categories Mac Tags convert, video, zoom 2 Comments on Zoom video file conversion Mac mini sucks (power) I think Zoom forgot to associate the “.zoom” file extension with this Transcode app in the installation script, but now I’ve described it here, I won’t forget for the next time. ![]() If you run that app from the commandline with the raw videofile as argument, it does convert the file just fine. Applications/.app/Contents/Frameworks/Transcode.app Dragging the file over the app doesn’t do anything either.īut, a little spelunking in the app shows us they’ve hidden a transcoder inside it at: A search on the net give me dozens of articles telling me to double-click it anyhow. No application is set to handle files with the “.zoom” extension. So, naturally, you double-click it, but that will only get you errors. In there you’ll find, among other things, a file named double_click_to_convert_01.zoom. If you go looking for the unconverted files, you’ll find them, on MacOS, in the folder ~/Documents/Zoom/. It seems that if you record a zoom video meeting and then interrupt the file conversion after the meeting, the video file may disappear from zoom, so you can’t restart the conversion later.
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