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Mr L. Shimer

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Everything posted by Mr L. Shimer

  1. No, thats the first thought I had and made sure with process lasso. I did some trouble shooting before dropping in here (as a last resort) to pester you folks. I have uninstalled it for now, but will reinstall once I have more time to monitor it. Thanks
  2. Nope, that should not be necessary, and Your Welcome phem0r have an awesome day.
  3. Never mind, I will take the uninstall route I guess. PeAcE
  4. First let me say that although I have not been here, I am a long time Ccleaner user and fan. I am proud to be a Ccleaner Professional Edition user. Piriform RoCkS ! Ok enough of that.... I recently noticed that Ccleaner is "Skipping Edge when cleaning, and when it is closed and Ccleaner preforms a auto clean. I thought at first that Edge was not fully closing so I took a peek in Task manager and it was stopped and to double check I checked it in Process Lasso as well and sure enough it was closed. Confused I started digging in my "Exclusion" list and it was not listed as an excluded file or folder. I can solve most issues with a little common sense and previous experience, but this escapes me. I thought of uninstalling Ccleaner and re-installing clean, but before I do that I wanted to post here and see what you guys think or if anyone else has experienced this. PeAcE OS: Windows 10 Pro x64 (10240) Ccleaner: v.5085308
  5. In Ccleaner add the whole steam file to the "Exclude" list in Options, I had to do this as well. There is also an option to have CCleaner clean up Steam in the "Application" tab under "Multimedia" clear this check mark and your good to go. PeAcE
  6. It didn't Install in windows.old, those are files and folders that MS saved over from your old OS. Although this has nothing to do with anything Ccleaner did or didn't do, I think I can offer you some cool tips. You need to copy the Steam files from the .old file and paste them into the windows 10 directory exactly where they were so pay attention to where your copying them from within the "windows.old" files, after that "Do Not" try to open Steam, reboot your PC and then try to start Steam, But Do Not Try To Launch Any Games. If Steam starts you did it right, now right click on a game and select properties and select verify game cache, it will obviously be broken but steam will download what is needed to fix the broken drivers and file associations. It is a rather small download and this prevents you from having to re-download all that content from scratch. I did this running Windows 10 Pro X64 10240 (Windows Insider) and it worked just fine saving me hours of download time. PeAcE
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