Jump to content

Glenn

Experienced Members
  • Posts

    785
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Glenn

  1. I meam Temporary files NOT Temporary Internet Files and yes , there should be a Temporary file folder as well as a Temporary Internet file folder along with a History Folder , and Application folder. Has been ever since I had my computer and that has been four years. Windows XP SP2.

    Below is how I get there:

     

    My Computer>Local Disk "C">Documents and Settings> User Name>Local Settings>. Click on the LOCAL Settings folder and it opens to show the Temporary File folder , a Temporary Internet file folder , an Application folder , and a History folder. Click on each folder to see the files there.

    I think we mean the same folder (and it may have nothing to do with your problem) but I've never seen it spelled out completely as "Temporary" or "Temporary Files", just "Temp".

     

  2. and btw, is it safte to remove whats inside this folder?

     

    C:\WINDOWS\SoftwareDistribution\Download

     

    That folder seems to hold two types of files/folders.

     

    1. Temporary folders and files for Microsoft updates that, if successful, self-delete 10 days later. I don't know what happens if the installation is not successful.

     

    2. Supplemental Microsoft Licenses (these will be small, e.g., 12 KB, and can be opened using Notepad) for stuff like the Malicious Software Removal Tool. These persist. You can delete them but the ones for regular downloads, e.g., the MSR Tool, will be replaced next time you download so it's futile.

  3. If you block ads by making them redirect to localhost (that is the IP of 127.0.0.1 which is in the HOSTS file as a redirect also), they will continue to try and connect to your localhost, instead of simply being stopped from loading. They will try to load roughly three times or more before they finally give up. Is this really that hard to understand?
    To avoid that, I run a little app called eDexter. It substitutes a local image (the default is a 1 pixel, 43 byte gif) for blocked/redirected sites. I use it to avoid the "The page cannot be displayed" messages but, theoretically, it also speeds things up to load a very small local file rather than download larger files over the internet.
  4. I've only had Windows clean up Prefetch once when I had a good idea of what happened. My observation for what it's worth:

     

    The number of files in Prefetch reached 129 (128 .pf files + Layout.ini). The next time I looked (after a reboot for other reasons), only 64 .pf files + Layout.ini remained. It looked like it was FIFO but of course the boot prefetch items had become the most recent.

     

    I don't know if the reboot was necessary or if it would have cleaned without.

  5. logging off/restarting, right-clicking the start button and going into properties>customize>advanced>clear list.

    clears the Most Frequently Used Programs List but (for me, in Win XP SP2) does not seem to clear the Run box.

     

    JDPower is correct ... CCleaner will clear the Run box if you select Run (in start menu), but the operation takes effect upon reboot. I think that's what shpongler meant by

    explorer.exe has to reboot to clear the runbox
    but I'm not sure why he mentions explorer.exe specifically.

     

    By the way, if you don't like the Most Frequently Used Programs List, consider either not allowing some programs to list, or disabling the list entirely and assigning the space to the Pinned list.

  6. What they said ... but also, ASUS used to (and still may) require that you change a jumper setting to allow writing to the BIOS. Check your manual (or their website) and make sure you know what to do.

  7.  

    Well, all the cookies in the folder end in either [1] or [2]. I'm not sure I can deduce anything from that.
    Take a screenshot or make note of the name/number. If you have another problem, check to see if any numbers have flipped.
  8. A couple of possible causes/solutions:

     

    1. Sometimes, a cookie that existed before the last install/update of CCleaner won't show in the left-hand column. You can sometimes correct this by deleting the existing cookie and going to the website to create a fresh one. It may then appear on the list and can be selected to the right-hand colulmn.

     

    2. Are the cookies in question incrementally numbered cookies? You can't see this in the CCleaner lists but it shows up in C:\Documents and Settings\<username>\Cookies. Some websites create a new cookie each time there's the slightest change and alternate version numbers, e.g., user@news.google[1].txt then user@news.google[2].txt then user@news.google[1].txt. I have found some sites that rotate through 1 to 3 for no apparent reason. It's been a while since I checked but CCleaner seemed unable to handle that situation so I use another cleaner that can manage it.

  9. Not that I know how to do it but perhaps:

     

    1. A size-limited folder that deletes the oldest files when the number of files reaches a limit, e.g., C:\Windows\Prefetch with its 128 file limit. (Limiting the total folder size would be closer to aaron's request but one big file could blow out everything else.)

     

    2. A time-limited folder that deletes each file a set number of days after its creation date, e.g., C:\WINDOWS\SoftwareDistribution\Download with its 10 day limit.

     

    EDIT: Limiting the total folder size might be handled similar to the way Recycle Bin is managed, complete with a warning about available space.

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.