Yes, they are annoying; but given the fact that the Xbox 360 was designed more than 10 years ago and specs out at way below what is recommended to run Minecraft on the PC (for processing power and RAM), it is actually pretty amazing that it runs the game as well as it does. Still, there isn't a whole lot you can do:
1) Some systems have had a harder life than others - keep your system clean and as cool as you can in order to keep the processors running at their best.
2) Keep processing intensive activities in the world to as much as a minimum as you can and don't concentrate them in a single area (e.g. have 4 small farms situated in different corners of your world rather than 1 large one... and then see item #3).
3) Whenever possible, only load the corner of the world you'll be working in. If you travel to another corner, save and exit the world and then reload at that point. This dumps the previous corner you were in and allows the processors to forget about any activities going on there.
4) Play offline if possible. Online play (the process of transmitting data through Live, etc). really seems to bog the system down.
5) If working with redstone, keep flashing lines covered over so that the game does not have to process lighting updates for these.
All the time when I play Minecraft.....
It glitches, crashes, and annoying lag spikes.
Can someone help me solve this probloem?
Yes, they are annoying; but given the fact that the Xbox 360 was designed more than 10 years ago and specs out at way below what is recommended to run Minecraft on the PC (for processing power and RAM), it is actually pretty amazing that it runs the game as well as it does. Still, there isn't a whole lot you can do:
1) Some systems have had a harder life than others - keep your system clean and as cool as you can in order to keep the processors running at their best.
2) Keep processing intensive activities in the world to as much as a minimum as you can and don't concentrate them in a single area (e.g. have 4 small farms situated in different corners of your world rather than 1 large one... and then see item #3).
3) Whenever possible, only load the corner of the world you'll be working in. If you travel to another corner, save and exit the world and then reload at that point. This dumps the previous corner you were in and allows the processors to forget about any activities going on there.
4) Play offline if possible. Online play (the process of transmitting data through Live, etc). really seems to bog the system down.
5) If working with redstone, keep flashing lines covered over so that the game does not have to process lighting updates for these.
Thank you for your awnser