MacBook is the ultimate saviors of workaholic folks when it comes to workmanship and efficiency. We all count on a MacBook when we seek superiority in terms of performance. It is in our good that our Apple devices last as long as they can be since they are very competent and very costly, too. If you also want to keep your MacBook alive and kicking, then read on and note down these important instructions about the efficient management of your MacBook. Don’t miss out on these tips as you may save a lot of bucks that you used to spend on the repairs of your electronics.

  • Don’t Fill Up Your Hard Drive Fully

Every MacBook comes with a sufficient storage capacity to hold your sensitive and important documents. But some people use this hard drive to store loads of multimedia and photos. When your hard drive is full or nearly full, it constantly asks for additional priority which slows down your other processes due to continues rewriting and re-reading. Keep at least a 10 percent portion of the hard drive free. If you are a movie freak and you want to store movies anyways, consider buying an external hard drive.  This way, you will have additional storage beyond your need and your MacBook won’t suffer from memory congestion as well. 

  • Updates are Inevitable

You might have saved your MacBook from many problems by just updating the system. Yet you find it too difficult to spare some time and install all updates. Reason? It takes too much time. No matter how large an update be, it is worth the wait since it works as a troubleshooter for you. Sit in the washroom a little longer, take a break from work, or just drink your coffee slowly, but let your MacBook install its updates regularly. This will save you from sending it to a MacBook Pro Repair in Auckland when it faces a glitch. This way, none of your updates take as long as a repair center does!

  • Remove the Charge (Please)!

This is one of the bad habits that are bent on to send your system to a MacBook Authorized Repairs once in its life. Even after completely charged, some of us find it too tiring to remove the charging plug. Moreover, great minds are plugging in at a 50 percent battery! All these practices reduce the battery life of the MacBook and eventually drain the battery. The practice of keeping the MacBook plugged in even after 100 percent reduces the battery’s charging cycle count and it is a grave threat to battery life. 

If these tips are followed, it is doubtless that your MacBook will live to its fullest and serve you at its best.