Also a "Remove skin" option inside ccleaner would help those who want to load and make ccleaner just a tad bit faster! And like another user suggested, remove temp files from [editable time]. Also, add more Windows Log files to the options
if your remaining drive space is that low that you have to decide which restore point to delete (instead of just deleteing them all)
Why do you think I'm making my suggestion...so I can pick and choose which -- not all -- restore point(s) to delete.
I already have two 1.5TB external drives and my laptop runs perfectly fine with its limited internal disk space. I do a lot of photo editing and try to keep as many photos immediately available as possible. It is when I load and edit multiples-of-gigabytes of new photos that I'd like to decide if it is time to move some offline onto said external drives or whether to delete an old restore point that I know I won't need to revert to.
Why do you think I'm making my suggestion...so I can pick and choose which -- not all -- restore point(s) to delete.
I already have two 1.5TB external drives and my laptop runs perfectly fine with its limited internal disk space. I do a lot of photo editing and try to keep as many photos immediately available as possible. It is when I load and edit multiples-of-gigabytes of new photos that I'd like to decide if it is time to move some offline onto said external drives or whether to delete an old restore point that I know I won't need to revert to.
Everyone has their own approach to things, mta.
Why do you need CCleaner to tell you what your Free TreeSize can ALREADY tell you ?
It can not only show me the Size of System Volume Information but also the individual size of every restore point folder which it holds.
and further more it can OPEN Windows Explorer to show the individual files and folders that are held there-in
Why do you need CCleaner to tell you what your Free TreeSize can ALREADY tell you ?
It can not only show me the Size of System Volume Information but also the individual size of every restore point folder which it holds.
and further more it can OPEN Windows Explorer to show the individual files and folders that are held there-in
Did you bother to read my initial post, Alan_B? Here's the pertinent portion (with my emphasis added):
When I am running low on disk space, I use CCleaner and Tree Size Free to determine which files to delete or move. CCleaner gives me the restore point information but not the size. Tree Size Free gives me the size but not the information.