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Registry cleaners

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  • P PaulowniaK

    Does anyone have any recommendation for good registry cleaners? (Free ones would be most appreciated, although I wouldn't mind paying if the thing has good reputation.) I've got a 2-year-old home PC that's nearly grinding to a halt. Can't say for certain it's the registry, but it's worth a try. Cheers.

    Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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    Roger Wright
    wrote on last edited by
    #31

    I recently bought one from Uniblue, and it did appear to help. But the real culprit dragging my system down was AdAware, and once I removed that, the system was back to new condition. The number of registry errors detected by the Uniblue cleaner has also dropped significantly, so the product appears to be doing something. But the Registry design is supposed to be fairly robust, and although it gets cluttered, I'm not convinced that this is a real problem. One feature of the Uniblue offering, though, is that it at least makes a backup copy of any Registry hive it plans to change before making any edits. Whether it's useful or not is unproven, but at least it's polite.

    Will Rogers never met me.

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    • A Alberto Bar Noy

      Try sysinternals tools to see what is specifically eating up resources. Task manager sucks at the task.

      Alberto Bar-Noy --------------- “The city’s central computer told you? R2D2, you know better than to trust a strange computer!” (C3PO)

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      PaulowniaK
      wrote on last edited by
      #32

      Alberto Bar-Noy wrote:

      Try sysinternals tools

      Thanks for the tip. Had a look at it at work on an XP and it looked pretty good. However, the Windows 7 version seems to be supplied from a different place. Do you know anything about that?

      Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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      • P peterchen

        What do you expect as result?

        FILETIME to time_t
        | FoldWithUs! | sighist | WhoIncludes - Analyzing C++ include file hierarchy

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        PaulowniaK
        wrote on last edited by
        #33

        peterchen wrote:

        What do you expect as result?

        Decreased complaints from my other half... :rolleyes:

        Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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        • A Aric Wang

          CClear is a tool used for clean disks.not registry.. :sigh: I am not a genius, but shed more sweat!

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          PaulowniaK
          wrote on last edited by
          #34

          Aric Green wrote:

          CClear is a tool used for clean disks.not registry.

          Does both, actually...

          Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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          • K Kyudos

            Give CCleaner[^] a go.

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            PaulowniaK
            wrote on last edited by
            #35

            So I did. I have to say I haven't seen a measurable difference in speed, but we shall see... (didn't get the time to play around after the clean up.) At any rate, it was kinda fun wiping out all the trillion unused registry values CCleaner found :) (I did back up the registry just in case ;) ) Thanks for the tip.

            Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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            • P PaulowniaK

              Alberto Bar-Noy wrote:

              Try sysinternals tools

              Thanks for the tip. Had a look at it at work on an XP and it looked pretty good. However, the Windows 7 version seems to be supplied from a different place. Do you know anything about that?

              Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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              A Offline
              Alberto Bar Noy
              wrote on last edited by
              #36

              No sorry... haven't tried them yet on win7

              Alberto Bar-Noy --------------- “The city’s central computer told you? R2D2, you know better than to trust a strange computer!” (C3PO)

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              • P PaulowniaK

                Does anyone have any recommendation for good registry cleaners? (Free ones would be most appreciated, although I wouldn't mind paying if the thing has good reputation.) I've got a 2-year-old home PC that's nearly grinding to a halt. Can't say for certain it's the registry, but it's worth a try. Cheers.

                Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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                X Offline
                xiecsuk
                wrote on last edited by
                #37

                Why are you assuming it is the registry that is causing the problem? What operating system are you using and how much memory do you have installed? I've just doubled the memory in my daughter's PC and the speed increase has been noticable. I haven't touched anything else.

                RogerH Too old to care much these days!!!

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                • K Kyudos

                  Give CCleaner[^] a go.

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                  Peter Adam
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #38

                  I have seen CCleaner killing Firebird DDEX on Visual Studio 2010 Prof. Firebird DDEX uses an empty Key to mark and CCleaner was happy to remove it.

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                  • P PaulowniaK

                    Does anyone have any recommendation for good registry cleaners? (Free ones would be most appreciated, although I wouldn't mind paying if the thing has good reputation.) I've got a 2-year-old home PC that's nearly grinding to a halt. Can't say for certain it's the registry, but it's worth a try. Cheers.

                    Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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                    A Offline
                    AAC Mike
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #39

                    "CCleaner" because it is fast, free and doesn't cause any problems. "Registry First Aid" cost but will actually repair some problems. Don't listen to sour grapes in other responders they obviously have not actually repaired anythingwith them. I've helped many using these types of utilities over the years.

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                    • P PaulowniaK

                      Point taken... I should probably sit down and work out what useless programs the thing is running. The PC in question belongs to my other half, and it's still booting up while I'm happily checking emails and reading the news on the web on my Mac when we start up at the same time. Just looking for a quicker way out of this problem...

                      Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #40

                      My Windows 7 laptop (Core i7 Quad 1.6Ghz, 8Gig RAM) got slowed to a grind booting and logging in from the moment I installed VS2010 and SQL Server 2008 to do development. My Power On to Desktop time went from 15 seconds to over 1 minute. After I finished the development for my project, I uninstalled VS2010 and SQL Server and was back to about 15-20 seconds boot time. BTW, can someone tell Microsoft to make uninstall easier for these programs. When you install, it's one installer to run, but to uninstall, many many things to remove one by one from the Uninstall program screen, not able to do just "Uninstall SQL Server 2008" and it would remove everything the installer put on, have to remove about 10 different things.

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                      • P PaulowniaK

                        Point taken... I should probably sit down and work out what useless programs the thing is running. The PC in question belongs to my other half, and it's still booting up while I'm happily checking emails and reading the news on the web on my Mac when we start up at the same time. Just looking for a quicker way out of this problem...

                        Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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                        C Offline
                        Christian Southgate
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #41

                        Process Explorer can be handy for finding what's eating your PC: [^] Also I found that a lot of my slowdown problems were caused by shell extensions - particularly those related to Adobe products. Here's a really good tool which allows you to easily switch these on and off: http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/shexview.html[^]

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                        • P PaulowniaK

                          Does anyone have any recommendation for good registry cleaners? (Free ones would be most appreciated, although I wouldn't mind paying if the thing has good reputation.) I've got a 2-year-old home PC that's nearly grinding to a halt. Can't say for certain it's the registry, but it's worth a try. Cheers.

                          Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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                          raimundo4u
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #42

                          I like RegSeeker the best. I think the latest is V1.55 You'll have to get it from some downloadsite because I believe the author does not have a website of his own. It's probably not even actively developed anymore but it still does the job for me.

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                          • K killabyte

                            the only reg cleaner i truely trust is the windows installer... yes that is right i re-install :sigh:

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                            Isfeasachme
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #43

                            Thumbs up. Agreed. Registry cleaners are the cancer surgery of computing. You try to carve out the bad stuff, accidentally cut out some of the good stuff and often introduce problems that kill your computer sooner.

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                            • K Kyudos

                              Give CCleaner[^] a go.

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                              BarrRobot
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #44

                              +1 for CCleaner. It's never given me any trouble.

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                              • P PaulowniaK

                                Does anyone have any recommendation for good registry cleaners? (Free ones would be most appreciated, although I wouldn't mind paying if the thing has good reputation.) I've got a 2-year-old home PC that's nearly grinding to a halt. Can't say for certain it's the registry, but it's worth a try. Cheers.

                                Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

                                J Offline
                                J Offline
                                jandora2011
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #45

                                Hi: Try Advanced System Care.com Have a good one Later

                                need to run a bin movie ,.. on windows medea player 11 microsoft

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                                • P PaulowniaK

                                  Does anyone have any recommendation for good registry cleaners? (Free ones would be most appreciated, although I wouldn't mind paying if the thing has good reputation.) I've got a 2-year-old home PC that's nearly grinding to a halt. Can't say for certain it's the registry, but it's worth a try. Cheers.

                                  Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

                                  R Offline
                                  R Offline
                                  Ravi Melkote
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #46

                                  I have been using CCleaner, you can find it at filehippo.com, it has a free version which works very well on all versions of windows. I have been using this sw for almost 3 years now in my office and at home on atleast 50 plus machines and it does a great job.

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                                  • P PaulowniaK

                                    Does anyone have any recommendation for good registry cleaners? (Free ones would be most appreciated, although I wouldn't mind paying if the thing has good reputation.) I've got a 2-year-old home PC that's nearly grinding to a halt. Can't say for certain it's the registry, but it's worth a try. Cheers.

                                    Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

                                    D Offline
                                    D Offline
                                    dpminusa
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #47

                                    I have used the following successfully. I see the point about problems but I have been OK using them. I have gained performance and reliability improvements from these. Sammsoft Advanced Registry Cleaner Auslogics Registry Cleaner Glary Utilities Glary also has an IE Assistant that finds those no-name ActiveX Downloads that hackers infect you with. To be safer just do a registry backup first.

                                    "Courtesy is the product of a mature, disciplined mind ... ridicule is lack of the same - DPM"

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                                    • P PaulowniaK

                                      Does anyone have any recommendation for good registry cleaners? (Free ones would be most appreciated, although I wouldn't mind paying if the thing has good reputation.) I've got a 2-year-old home PC that's nearly grinding to a halt. Can't say for certain it's the registry, but it's worth a try. Cheers.

                                      Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

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                                      User 3351100
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #48

                                      Take it from a computer tech that thinks he knows a little.. Your windows registry file is a database of settings similar to a access database for arguments sake. The whole thing is broken up in several sections and the most important 2 is the software and system settings. These two files are generally around 20-60Mb combined. Loading all those settings into the memory would take even a VERY slow hard drive only 1-2 seconds. So the physical size of your registry does not impact performance at all, the whole concept of "cleaning" the registry is utter BS. Next up is what the registry actually does, there is about 900 million settings in there for how windows and programs behave, lots of "make my computer uber fast" programs just change visual settings like how fast windows pop up and if they fade in and out etc to give you the false impression of a faster computer. Some try and search for "dead/unused" settings in the registry which brings me back to my first point. They take no time to load, they use almost no memory so why would deleting those keys give you any benefit? Conclusion: Registry cleaners = snake oil/bullpoop Want to make your old computer faster? Get a hirens boot cd and scan your hard drive for UNC's with mhdd or vivard. If you have no unc's (if you have <10 remap them with the same program) do a defrag with mydefrag. Use autoruns to disable the 700 startup entries that you dont need. Uninstall the 75 toolbars that you have picked up over the years for IE/explorer. Not helping? format and reinstall is the only way.

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                                      • P PaulowniaK

                                        peterchen wrote:

                                        What do you expect as result?

                                        Decreased complaints from my other half... :rolleyes:

                                        Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

                                        P Offline
                                        P Offline
                                        peterchen
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #49

                                        Now how much do you think such a product would cost? :cool: IMAO: Don't bother. Uninstall crap. Use msinfo or some other tool to kill autostart items. If you are still on XP, use the sysinternals reg defrag (not sure if this is still necessary/useful for Win7). Then, get her some flowers and chocolate.

                                        FILETIME to time_t
                                        | FoldWithUs! | sighist | WhoIncludes - Analyzing C++ include file hierarchy

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                                        • P PaulowniaK

                                          Does anyone have any recommendation for good registry cleaners? (Free ones would be most appreciated, although I wouldn't mind paying if the thing has good reputation.) I've got a 2-year-old home PC that's nearly grinding to a halt. Can't say for certain it's the registry, but it's worth a try. Cheers.

                                          Almost, but not quite, entirely unlike... me...

                                          S Offline
                                          S Offline
                                          Snowman58
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #50

                                          Killing all the crapware running in the background will probably give you more improvement than a registry cleanup. CCleaner includes a startup tool that lets you turn off or delete the auto startups. (Turn them off until you are sure you want to kill them) If you are running Win7, you might also go to Control Panel -> Performance Information and Tools -> Adjust Visual Effects -> Adjust for Best Performance. You will lose the Aero effects, etc., but on a slow machine it’s much faster.

                                          Melting Away www.deals-house.com www.innovative--concepts.com

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