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Andavari

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Posts posted by Andavari

  1. They did a nice job copying Linux and Mac which is what I just read on another forum that's also in discussion about it, and yeah it looks that way.

    Although moving the Windows Start Menu button is really going to annoy some people.

  2. I know it used to be IE based way back when I tried in on WinXP, so when CCleaner would clean Internet Explorer it would also be cleaning Maxthon (Cookies, Temporary Internet Files, etc).

    It might be "safer" to use the last WinXP compatible version of Firefox.

  3. 2 hours ago, nukecad said:

    As if users are realy bothered what it's called anyway as long as it works.

    I encounter something buggy or glitched in Win10 almost everyday. The most annoying at present is it doesn't honor my folder settings the way I want them ordered. It too often goes back to the defaults even though umpteen times I've globally set it with my preferences which is very annoying.

  4. That was one of the files I'd manually backup onto another disk when I still used the install version.

    Another possibility is they don't delete it since it's not included by default which is possibly more feasible instead of moving files (well that's the way Inno Setup works by default), that way if re-installing it's right where it needs to be. Unless of course if they started using the ProgramData folder for storing it like most other software does.

  5. I've seen that mentioned online the past few days. As far as the "last version" I know a few people in businesses when they were doing the forced upgrades where Win10 really was their last version, some bought Macs and others started using Linux.

  6. If deactivating the updates then in a short amount of time there will be an outdated vulnerable version on the system, and who knows if a newer version will be installed when doing the once or twice yearly large Windows Upgrade since Edge Chromium has it's own update separate from Windows Updates.

  7. Possibly could be an issue, however some other tools that wipe free space will wipe by placing them into a temporary folder which I assume "might be safer" than just writing to the root of a disk drive. So maybe they could implement something like "C:\CCWFS_05292021_646PM" with the date an time to insure it doesn't end up in a folder that is pre-existing, then also delete that temporary folder upon completion even if the user cancels WFS.

  8. CCleaner should be able to remove Drive Wiper/Wipe Free Space ("WFS") leftover ZZZ files/folders without having to do a potentially very time consuming re-run of WFS to full completion. CCleaner should be able to detect that the user cancelled WFS, and then just do a normal fast delete of the ZZZ files/folders it created so the user doesn't have reduced free disk space.

    A recent topic shows it's still an issue, and at this point for too many years:
    https://community.ccleaner.com/topic/60499-zzz-folders-zzz-files-and-thousands-of-zip-files/

  9. For just seeing what the drive is capable of I'd recommend using CrystalDiskInfo (https://crystalmark.info/en/download) (it's free and only lists details about disk drives).

    In it look for:

    * Interface:
    Should state UASP (Serial ATA).

    UASP allows the drive to function faster when plugged into a USB 3.0 port, it allows up to 70% faster read speeds and 40% faster write speeds. If it's a desktop PC only plug the drive into the USB 3.0 ports on the back of the PC, it's a little know fact that those are typically always faster than any USB 3.0 ports on the front or top of a PC which may be using some add-on to add USB 3.0 ports to a more convenient yet slower location.

    If you're using Windows 10 and if the drive is slow it can mean that Write Cache is disabled. Windows 10 used to have Write Cache enabled by default, but now it's off by default. Off is safer, but much slower, and you have to 100% of the time safely remove the device to prevent corruption.

    * Transfer Mode:
    Should state SATA/300 | SATA/600

    SATA/300 = 300 Gbps (often incorrectly called "SATA 2").
    SATA/600 = 600 Gbps (often incorrectly called "SATA 3").

  10. It is bizarre to instantly scan. I guess the only way to find out if it's still working is wait awhile, and then see if it eventually finds something to remove.

    One thing to try is right click the CCleaner icon and select to run it as administrator, only other thing I can think of is perhaps it's a privileges thing since it does need admin level to clean the registry.

  11. 7 hours ago, nukecad said:

    Unless you are selling or otherwise passing the disc/computer on to someone else wiping the free space is not needed.

    That's the best advice in this now one year old topic. I think too many are hung up on WFS as perhaps a privacy aspect when in reality it's a tool best used when getting rid of a hard disk or PC.

  12. ChkDsk shows more information that you can digest, plus it can be more powerful such as running a surface scan using ChkDsk /R to find bad sectors which is something I do no more than once or twice per year on my backup hard disk but that takes hours on a 1TB or larger hard disk.

    The This PC method isn't really all that useful to be honest, it's just a quick way but it gives very little information.

  13. Well known issue, see this search and preferably follow what a PC manufacturer or well known tech website states - it doesn't require any 3rd party software to fix it either, what's built into Windows will help you remedy the issue:
    https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Fix+100%+disk+usage+in+Windows+10

    Edit:
    As for the built in Windows 10 Optimize Drives running in the background and interfering with your work on the PC you can get around that by manually running it such as; Start it when you know you won't be using the PC for many hours such as before you go to bed and let it run overnight (remember to turn off your monitor so it isn't needlessly using power and being worn out):
    1. Open: This PC
    2. Right click your hard disk drive and select: Properties
    3. Click: Tools
    4. Under Error Checking click: Check
    5. Under Optimize and defragment drive click: Optimize, then in the Optimize Drives window highlight your hard disk drive and select Optimize.
    6. You can now turn off your monitor and leave the computer to finish optimizing the drive without interruption.

    One thing is for certain with an SSD the optimization is done so quickly it won't interrupt you when working, you won't even notice it. Getting something like a small SSD OS boot drive of at least 240GB to 256GB is more-or-less a standard (although with current pricing at least 480GB to 512GB makes more sense price-wise) and is all that's really needed for Windows 10 to fit comfortably. The hard disk drive can be repurposed as a mass storage data drive to store music, movies, etc., that you don't want taking up the SSD capacity.

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