Facs about nave simbl3/25/2023 Use -i and -heavy to re-report with count sorting Timeline format: stacks are sorted chronologically Path: /Applications/TurboTax Home Business 2015.app/Contents/MacOS/TurboTax 2015ĭuration: 1.00s (process was unresponsive for 286 seconds before sampling) I would greatly appreciate advice on what's causing the crashes and how to stop them. I am attaching a small portion of the last "crash report". TurboTax Crashes on my iMac macOS Mojave 10.14.6 My TurboTax crashes at least once per day. Anyone have some insight what process is actually causing this & how to make it stop? I'll keep investigating. I can't find the PIDs called out in the Console log in Activity Monitor. ReportCrash is running a process for each logged in account apparently involving the SIMBL agent crashing.ĭefaultđ7:34:53.191503-0800 ReportCrash Parsing corpse data for process SIMBL Agent ĭefaultđ7:34:54.588454-0800 ReportCrash Saved crash report for SIMBL Agent version 0.9.7 (0.9.7) to SIMBL Agent_-173454_Family-iMac-II.crashĭefaultđ7:34:54.591756-0800 ReportCrash Removing excessive log: SIMBL Agent_-173454_Family-iMac-II.crashĭefaultđ7:35:03.248459-0800 ReportCrash Parsing corpse data for process SIMBL Agent ĭefaultđ7:35:04.835130-0800 ReportCrash Saved crash report for SIMBL Agent version 0.9.7 (0.9.7) to SIMBL Agent_-173504_Family-iMac-II.crashĭefaultđ7:35:04.838654-0800 ReportCrash Removing excessive log: SIMBL Agent_-173504_Family-iMac-II.crash I can't find anything on my hard drive by that name except for a text file with a few lines of content going back to 2011. I can't find a running task called SIMBL in Activity Monitor (seeing All Processes). All of these are bound by a circle of life and love, without a beginning or end.I'm seeing a continous crash state involving the "SIMBL Agent_2019-" process that's gobbling up a lot of CPU time and slowing my iMac down.Life itself – childhood, youth, middle years and old age.The day – sunrise, noon, evening and night.The four seasons – spring, summer, fall and winter.The four directions – north, east, south and west.The Zia believed that the giver of all good gave them gifts in groups of four. This is an ancient sun symbol of a Native American people called the Zia. There are four groups of rays with four rays in each group. On New Mexico’s flag, we see a red sun with rays stretching out from it. First brought to New Mexico by Spanish explorers in 1540. Flag: New Mexico flag shows a yellow field and a red symbol that are the colors of Spain.
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