macOS issues – boot loop, update problems and the spinning beach ball
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Quick answer
macOS issues often look like hardware problems. Before you pay for a repair: try Safe Mode (Shift at boot), Recovery Mode (Cmd+R) and a clean macOS install. If none of that helps, it really is hardware — and that's where we take over.
Software or hardware fault?
The most important exercise: figure out whether the problem is software or hardware. Software you can often fix yourself. Hardware needs us.
Signs of a software fault:
- The problem started after a macOS update or installing a new app
- The problem disappears in Safe Mode
- The problem only affects one user account on the MacBook
- Disk Utility can repair the drive without errors
Signs of a hardware fault:
- The problem is also there in Safe Mode
- The problem is there after a clean macOS install
- Consistent kernel panics with the same error
- SMART shows “Failing”
- Disk Utility can’t repair the drive
The five reset options
| Reset | Keys | What it does |
|---|---|---|
| Hard shutdown | 10 seconds on power button | Forces the MacBook to power off |
| NVRAM | Cmd+Option+P+R for 20 seconds at boot (Intel) | Resets display, sound and startup settings |
| SMC | Shift+Ctrl+Option+Power for 10 seconds (Intel) | Resets power, battery and fan management |
| Safe Mode | Shift at boot | Starts macOS without third-party extensions |
| Recovery Mode | Cmd+R (Intel) / hold power (Apple Silicon) | Mini-system for disk repair and reinstallation |
On Apple Silicon (M1/M2/M3/M4) SMC and NVRAM no longer exist — Apple has consolidated them into firmware. A hard restart resolves most equivalent issues.
The nuclear option: a clean install
If nothing else works and you have a Time Machine backup or iCloud Drive, do a clean install:
- Take one last backup now (Time Machine or manually copy Documents/Downloads/Desktop)
- Boot into Recovery Mode
- Disk Utility → select “Macintosh HD” → “Erase” (APFS, GUID)
- Back in Recovery → “Reinstall macOS”
- Set up as a new Mac and sign in with iCloud
- Migrate your files from backup or iCloud
Takes 1-2 hours. Resolves 95% of all non-hardware macOS issues.
Where can I get help if nothing works?
We can:
- Run a full diagnostic on RAM, SSD and logic board
- DFU-flash macOS firmware on Apple Silicon (requires Apple Configurator + another Mac)
- Recover data before a clean install
- Identify whether a hardware fault is masquerading as a software issue
Pricing for purely software diagnosis and reinstallation: typically DKK 500–1,000.
How to rescue a MacBook stuck on the Apple logo
⏱ PT15M
- Hard restart. Hold the power button for 10 seconds. Wait 10 seconds. Power on normally.
- Boot into Safe Mode. Intel Macs: press the power button and immediately hold Shift until the login screen appears. Apple Silicon (M1/M2/M3/M4): shut down completely, hold the power button until 'Loading startup options' appears, choose your drive, hold Shift and click 'Continue in Safe Mode'. You'll see 'Safe Boot' at the top.
- If Safe Mode doesn't work: Recovery Mode. Intel: hold Cmd+R at boot. Apple Silicon: hold the power button until 'Loading startup options' appears, then choose 'Options'.
- Run Disk Utility First Aid. In Recovery: Disk Utility → select 'Macintosh HD' → First Aid → Run. This repairs file system errors.
- Make a backup if possible — BEFORE going further. Before a reinstall or Erase: try to get the data out. In Recovery: Terminal → 'cp -R' to an external disk, or (Intel) Target Disk Mode with the T key, or (Apple Silicon) Share Disk via 'Options' → 'Utilities'. Skip this and you risk losing data permanently.
- Reinstall macOS if needed. Back at the Recovery main menu: 'Reinstall macOS'. THIS DOES NOT ERASE DATA — only the system is rebuilt.
- Restore from Time Machine. If you have a backup: 'Restore from Time Machine Backup' in Recovery.
- Contact us if nothing works. Persistent failure after a clean install = hardware. Let us diagnose it.