BrendanClay wrote:
While a little over four years old, I have found my MacBook Pro (13-inch, 2020, Four Thunderbolt 3 ports) to be showing its age—particularly in the absence of intensive usage.
That's an Intel model. There is an upper limit to the performance that it will ever reach. It's never going to be Apple Silicon. But it should be among the fastest Intel machines that Apple ever made.
The fans often run hot and fast, particularly when connected to my 27" ViewFinity S90PC 5K Monitor, with the clamshell open or closed.
It is always best to generate an EtreCheck report while the computer is behaving poorly or shortly thereafter.
The fans themselves have no meaning. They are just a symptom of some other problem. In this case, the external display is most likely a separate problem. What's important is not the 4 Thunderbolt ports. It's the lack of native HDMI. You have to use an adapter. Those adapters can sometimes trigger a low-level hardware fault that puts the system into "emergency" mode where it throttles the CPU, runs the fans at full blast, and drains the battery in a few minutes. So if you want to investigate this problem, I recommend keeping the external display disconnected while you investigate problem #1. Otherwise, it will be difficult to distinguish between them.
(For context, in my day-to-day, I generally run Brave browser, Notion, Slack, Google Calendar, etc.)
That's a lot of 3rd party apps. Google assumes that you are running Chrome - and absolutely nothing else. It would prefer to take over your entire machine. Google considers macOS to be simply a "Chrome launcher".
For what it's worth, I try to run Onyx at regular intervals and well as 'Sensei' which allows me to monitor startup/login items, etc..
You don't need to do any maintenance. The operating system does that automatically unless you've installed certain 3rd party tools that can break that functionality.
I've never heard of "Sensei" and I don't know why you would need it. Since macOS Ventura (you have Sonoma, which is even more recent), Apple has added extensive nag notifications for any kind of system modification. I can't imagine anyone wanting more of that.
Is this Apple's roundabout way of pushing me into the purchase of a Silicon-chipped upgrade?
They're really nice computers. But to get the best experience, I strongly recommend getting your current system in order first. Otherwise, these kinds of problems can be even worse on Apple Silicon.
"EtreCheck report shows poor performance. This is unusual."
(Ambiguous much?)
Seems pretty specific to me, but then I'm biased. 😄
But hey... maybe there is something here that is actionable.
Alas, not too much.
There are two basic ways that EtreCheck measures performance - hard drive speed and overall runtime.
Your hard drive speeds are pretty good. Recent Mac computers have crazy fast SSDs. Now that fusion drives are finally gone, there should be no more hard drive problems other than those that are self-imposed. While Apple always improves SSD performance every year, at this time, SSD performance is more or less the same on recent Intel and Apple Silicon computers. You're not missing much here with Intel.
However, your file system performance is suspiciously poor. 30 seconds is OK, for a mechanical hard drive. A modern SSD should be 15 seconds or less.
The other way that EtreCheck measures performance is with overall runtime. Over the years, it seems that well-running computers tend to generate an EtreCheck report in 3 minute or less. So I codified that into the app itself, and tried my best to keep the value stable. Your runtime was almost 14 minutes. I wouldn't be surprised to see that on a base model 2015 iMac with a failing Fusion Drive. But your computer should generating the report in well under 3 minutes.