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marmite

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Posts posted by marmite

  1. Also check the Windows Event Logs - System and Application. There might be entries in there that give you useful diagnostic information. Not sure where you'll find these in W7 ... traditionally they are in Control Panel / Administrative Tools / Event Viewer.

     

    Also, if you can find Control Panel / Administrative Tools / Computer Management, go to the Device Manager section. If you can fond the offending driver(s) you might be able to get troubleshooting information by right-clicking on the driver, select Properties and then the Driver tab. If it says the driver isn't working try the Troubleshoot... button. All of this is XP-speak but it's probably not too different in W7. You may find that you need to reinstall the offending driver(s).

     

    Have you tried the support link that ident supplied?

     

    Also as he says I still think the System Restore option is worth exploring. If you're not familiar with it have a look at these articles ...

    http://windows.microsoft.com/en-US/windows...ns-in-Windows-7

    http://www.technospot.net/blogs/how-to-do-...-and-windows-7/

  2. Nope, haven't done that.

     

    I've just set up Process Explorer to start with Windows, and minimized, and it works fine. I would have thought this would: (From CCleaner Startup)

     

    Ufzpr.jpg

    Ah :) You want C:\WINDOWS\system32\taskmgr.exe

  3. it's just a stubborn streak I have which means come hell or high water I'll close down my pc with the Task Manager "lean" setting, and then get it to start minimized with Windows.

     

    If it starts minimized it won't make the slightest bit of difference whether it's "lean" or not, but I'm buggered if I'm gonna give up on doing it anyway.

     

    The problem is that Task Manager will not start with Windows whichever way I set it up to do so.

    Okay I see where you're going :)

     

    Starting minimized is the straightforward bit. In 'normal' mode, under options, uncheck 'Minimize on Use' and check 'Hide when Minimized'. Then in your start menu shortcut properties, set 'Run:' to Minimized. That should sort out start-up.

     

    As for small-footprint, this still works if you've closed TM in small-footprint view. However, where it falls down is that there's no way within TM to minimize it again once it's restored (you can minimize TM from Process Explorer though!). So it doesn't really hold as a fully working model in that mode.

  4. Ignore CCleaner for a minute, if you enter a user and password in IE, the close IE, reopen IE and go back to that site does it remember your credentials?

     

    If not then IE is fundamentally where the problem lies. Have a look at this article ... http://pubs.logicalexpressions.com/Pub0009...icle.asp?ID=348

     

    I must admit, even though all of my registry entries and IE Options appear to be set correctly, I can't get saved form passwords to work. I don't use it normally and originally answered 'no' to saving passwords - but now in investigating this thread it doesn't seem to want to turn back on.

     

    If I use another clean user it's fine, so it would appear that something is not being properly reset in my normal user. There are loads of articles on google about people having similar problems.

  5. Aha! The Advanced setting is not ticked. Thank you for clarifying that for me.

    Can you give me a rough idea of how long the 1 pass WFS usually takes on a 100+/- GB drive?

    It's stating the obvious, but it depends on how much freespace you have ;). I honestly don't know; it's not a setting I use and different tools seem to do this at different rates depending on the algorithms they use and the thoroughness with which they perform the task.

     

    Other people might be able to post some times per Gb based on their experience.

  6. I guess CCleaner really does wipe free drive space.

     

    If it is wiping 128GB of free space doing 3 passes, that should take ages, I would think.

    What am I missing, folks?

    I'll tell you this, I've unchecked WFS.

    Yes it does wipe free space, but consensus has it that it only does one pass of zeros, irrespective of the secure wipe settings.

     

    But that still doesn't explain the time issue. WFS needs two ticks, one in Options / Settings, the other in CCleaner / Windows / Advanced. Maybe you only had one of them checked?

  7. Hi Bob, welcome to the forums.

     

    Click Options / Advanced / 'Save all settings to INI file'. You'll then find all CCleaner settings, including the cookie list, in the ini file in your CCleaner program folder.

     

    You can use this ini file on your new machine by clicking the same option and then replacing the new ini file with the one from your old machine.

  8. 1. People who do not allow applications to access the internet for security reasons manually *update*.

    A generalisation. "People who do not allow applications to access the internet for security reasons" may do many things, one of which is allow trusted applications to check for updates. Other people may not.

     

    2. When they do, they UNCHECK ALL because all options are already there from the previous version they are updating. THey are *not* installing, just updating.

    Different installers behave differently. Do this with some installers on update and they'll remove unchecked items; for example, they'll remove your Start Menu short cut.

     

    This is why UNCHECK ALL is essential.

    If you can do it manually, easily and quickly, then it's 'nice to have' or at most 'very desirable' - but certainly not essential.

     

    FWIW I'd rather just see a sensible set of default checks - I don't think that to have all options checked by default in CCleaner is desirable either. But at the end of the day the whole idea of a set of options is that you pick those that suit you.

  9. I have Framework SP3.5 SP1. Maybe not the same one we're talking about.

    Aethec is referring to XP SP3. You should really do this for security reasons - there's absolutely no reason not to.

     

    The current Service Pack for .Net Framework 3.5 is SP1, so you're up-to-date there.

     

    Edited to add: incidentally, this is a complete aside from your original problem ... just a separate suggestion.

  10. I went to the page you gave me and I did some diagnostics and now my IE will clear out my temporary files, etc., without a problem. But CCleaner is still giving me the same error.

    What were the diagnostics that sorted out IE? This might help someone else.

     

    Can you get to 'Disk Management'? Try 'Windows key' + R to get the 'Run' dialog box, then type diskmgmt.msc and press enter. You should (assuming this works for W7) get the Disk Management display. Can you maximise it, take a screenshot and post it here.

  11. Did as you said, but still won't let me delete temporary internet files, cookies, etc., unless I do them manually. I think something is corrupt in that IE, but don't know if it will help my CCleaner. Any other ideas? I'm thinking about uninstalling IE and reinstalling. But don't know that it will get all the temporary files, etc. Not sure how the uninstall works. (as long as it doesn't touch my FireFox, I'm not sweating...yet)

    I don't have Windows 7 so I can't give concrete suggestions. I did google uninstalling IE8 on W7 but information seems a bit sparse. Maybe IE8 is actually tied into the OS build, so you may not be able to literally uninstall. In the absence of other suggestions your best bet might be to trawl around for articles on repairing IE8 on W7; that or articles with people having similar issues.

     

    As for deleting files you should be able to clear most if not all manually.

     

    The only other thing that springs to mind is to try deleting them (thro' Internet Options) in Safe Mode, just in case something else has those files locked.

     

    Also, some of the other things you've described in earlier posts don't sound too healthy either; the \Device\Harddisk volume references. If problems persist you might need to consider other actions.

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