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You play on your bed? Then that's the issue right there. Not only will your Mac be frying inside it's aluminium casing because no air can circulate (the aluminium casing is actually designed to dissipate the heat from the CPU which is why it needs to have space underneath), it will also be drawing in loads of fluff and fibres into the single fan which will be clogging up.
If your RAM is not seated right then why don't you unscrew the bottom and reseat it? You must have replaced the RAM at some point to know it's not correctly fitted?
Your problems are solvable (apart from the known Intel 4000 issues), but only by you 🙂
- 11 years agoI haven't had it refitted, I discussed it with the apple guy and we came to that conclusion that it isn't the RAM. Because the computer still works expect for when I'm playing sims. I've already set to go have it cleaned. And I've blown it out a few times today already.
- Bluebellflora11 years agoHero+
Ok, now I'm confused. Is it a RAM issue or not? Because you said in your previous post "It also isn't positioned correctly I know that" which would indicate that you've refitted it at some point. RAM can beep due to just being a faulty chip, even if it is fitted properly. Is 8Gb RAM showing up in the Mac info when you click on the Apple logo and then "About This Mac"?
The Sims 3 is appalling on any Mac due to EA having used Cider to "wrap" the Windows version of the game.
- 11 years agoI meant I know that my computer isn't positioned or placed correctly for air flow. I have done smc and pram resets but they don't really do anything. The smc reset is usually what I do if I want immediate use of my computer after it crashes while I'm playing sims. Otherwise I just leave it alone and it will boot up properly as it does every time. And yes the RAM 8 gb shows up when I click the apple button.
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