
Make sure you didn’t have a change of heart and you don’t want any of them recovered. Open up Trash to take one last look at the deleted files. Unsurprisingly, files that are sitting in the Trash may still take actual kilobytes, megabytes, and – what we are looking for – gigabytes of potentially free space on your drive until fully removed. If you are one of those users – stick around. You can skip this one if you are keeping your bin empty on regular basis, however, for an average user, the process of removing a file is usually concluded after it was dragged to Trash. The easiest, fastest, and most obvious action that takes no additional utility, and can be done on your own – emptying the Trash bin. How to Remove Files from Startup Disk on Mac and Make More Memory Available Quickly It should come as no surprise, that pushing your drive’s limits is not advisable, but if you already did cross the line and things have gone south with your MacBook – there is still a way out.

In fact, you are better off keeping at least 15% of the disk capacity available at all times if you don’t want to start experiencing occasional hick-ups and errors. Alright, you got it, the drive fills up in a blink of an eye, but what’s so bad about it?Īpple has included the ‘disk is almost full’ warning for a reason, as Mac OS does require free disk space to operate. Owning a 128GB drive computer should really come with a space management 101 as, to be honest, it fills up much quicker than you would expect. Storage capacity on MacBooks is probably the most underwhelming part of the machine, especially in base models. How to Clean Up Startup Disk and Why It Is Important
