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Desperately need disk auditing tool

 
 
J Krugman
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      21st Nov 2004





My system has been freezing up a lot lately. I have applied every
upgrade, and every virus and spyware protection software available,
but the problem persists. The next possible diagnosis is that my
hard disk is too full (it's at almost 90% capacity now).

My company's IT desk says that SOP for this is to back-up the entire
disk, and do a fresh install of Windows. This is something that
only they can do (unless I want to pay for Windows out of my own
pocket), because only they have the site-licensed disks, but they
are swamped at the moment, and can't help me until after Thanksgiving,
which is too long for me to wait.

In the meantime, I want to free up as much space in my disk as
possible. Therefore, I am looking for some tool, preferably free
(or very cheap), that will help me identify very large files and
folders that get little use. (I tried Disk Clean, or some such,
but it did not give me sufficiently detailed information; it only
told me that a bazillion bytes' worth of disk had not been used
much in the recent months, and were good candidates for compressing.
I don't want to compress files; I want to delete them. Besides,
when I tried accepting Disk Clean's compression, the machine ground
to a halt. Maybe the disk is so full that it interferes with the
compression program?)

Any recommendations would be much appreciated!

jill

--
To s&e^n]d me m~a}i]l r%e*m?o\v[e bit from my a|d)d:r{e:s]s.

 
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Pegasus \(MVP\)
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Posts: n/a
 
      21st Nov 2004

"J Krugman" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:cnp4ib$m0u$(E-Mail Removed)...
>
>
>
>
>
> My system has been freezing up a lot lately. I have applied every
> upgrade, and every virus and spyware protection software available,
> but the problem persists. The next possible diagnosis is that my
> hard disk is too full (it's at almost 90% capacity now).
>
> My company's IT desk says that SOP for this is to back-up the entire
> disk, and do a fresh install of Windows. This is something that
> only they can do (unless I want to pay for Windows out of my own
> pocket), because only they have the site-licensed disks, but they
> are swamped at the moment, and can't help me until after Thanksgiving,
> which is too long for me to wait.
>
> In the meantime, I want to free up as much space in my disk as
> possible. Therefore, I am looking for some tool, preferably free
> (or very cheap), that will help me identify very large files and
> folders that get little use. (I tried Disk Clean, or some such,
> but it did not give me sufficiently detailed information; it only
> told me that a bazillion bytes' worth of disk had not been used
> much in the recent months, and were good candidates for compressing.
> I don't want to compress files; I want to delete them. Besides,
> when I tried accepting Disk Clean's compression, the machine ground
> to a halt. Maybe the disk is so full that it interferes with the
> compression program?)
>
> Any recommendations would be much appreciated!
>
> jill
>
> --
> To s&e^n]d me m~a}i]l r%e*m?o\v[e bit from my a|d)d:r{e:s]s.
>


Here are a couple of tools that let you find out what's eating up
your disk space:

DriveUse:
http://members.ozemail.com.au/~nulif...are/index.html
Bullet Proof Folder sizes: http://www.foldersizes.com/

Some general remarks:
- A disk that's 90% full is close to useless. Good disk management implies
that you put on the brakes at 70% and start taking strong measures
at 80%.
- Your system instability is unlikely to be caused by your full disk.
- PCs are at their best when newly built; from then onwards they
deteriorate.
When the deterioration has gone too far, the PC needs to be rebuilt (or
preferably restored from an image, which can be done in less than one
hour).

I take a snapshot of my PCs once every three months, and I keep the three
most recent snapshots. If my system becomes unstable then I revert to the
most recent snapshot.


 
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J Krugman
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Posts: n/a
 
      23rd Nov 2004
In <udb3#(E-Mail Removed)> "Pegasus \(MVP\)" <(E-Mail Removed)> writes:

>"J Krugman" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
>news:cnp4ib$m0u$(E-Mail Removed)...
>>
>> My system has been freezing up a lot lately...


>Here are a couple of tools that let you find out what's eating up
>your disk space:


>DriveUse:
>http://members.ozemail.com.au/~nulif...are/index.html
>Bullet Proof Folder sizes: http://www.foldersizes.com/


Thanks!

>Some general remarks:
>- A disk that's 90% full is close to useless. Good disk management implies
> that you put on the brakes at 70% and start taking strong measures
> at 80%.
>- Your system instability is unlikely to be caused by your full disk.


Correct. It appears to have been a corrupted hard drive. chkdsk
seems to have taken care of it. (Knock on wood.)

>- PCs are at their best when newly built; from then onwards they
>deteriorate.
> When the deterioration has gone too far, the PC needs to be rebuilt (or
> preferably restored from an image, which can be done in less than one
> hour).


I've heard this from practically every Windows expert I know. I
find it simply amazing.

<rant>I've managed half a dozen Linux boxes over several years,
and never had this problem. Full rebuilds have never been dictated
by system deterioration. I really don't understand why MS can't
design an OS that doesn't deteriorate over time like this.</rant>

>I take a snapshot of my PCs once every three months, and I keep the three
>most recent snapshots. If my system becomes unstable then I revert to the
>most recent snapshot.


Pardon the ignorant question but how exactly do you make the snapshots? Do you use NTBACKUP.EXE, or do you use some other tool?

jill



--
To s&e^n]d me m~a}i]l r%e*m?o\v[e bit from my a|d)d:r{e:s]s.

 
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Pegasus \(MVP\)
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      23rd Nov 2004

"J Krugman" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:co031q$srf$(E-Mail Removed)...
> In <udb3#(E-Mail Removed)> "Pegasus \(MVP\)"

<(E-Mail Removed)> writes:
>
> >"J Krugman" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> >news:cnp4ib$m0u$(E-Mail Removed)...
> >>
> >> My system has been freezing up a lot lately...

>
> >Here are a couple of tools that let you find out what's eating up
> >your disk space:

>
> >DriveUse:
> >http://members.ozemail.com.au/~nulif...are/index.html
> >Bullet Proof Folder sizes: http://www.foldersizes.com/

>
> Thanks!
>
> >Some general remarks:
> >- A disk that's 90% full is close to useless. Good disk management

implies
> > that you put on the brakes at 70% and start taking strong measures
> > at 80%.
> >- Your system instability is unlikely to be caused by your full disk.

>
> Correct. It appears to have been a corrupted hard drive. chkdsk
> seems to have taken care of it. (Knock on wood.)
>
> >- PCs are at their best when newly built; from then onwards they
> >deteriorate.
> > When the deterioration has gone too far, the PC needs to be rebuilt

(or
> > preferably restored from an image, which can be done in less than one
> > hour).

>
> I've heard this from practically every Windows expert I know. I
> find it simply amazing.
>
> <rant>I've managed half a dozen Linux boxes over several years,
> and never had this problem. Full rebuilds have never been dictated
> by system deterioration. I really don't understand why MS can't
> design an OS that doesn't deteriorate over time like this.</rant>
>
> >I take a snapshot of my PCs once every three months, and I keep the three
> >most recent snapshots. If my system becomes unstable then I revert to the
> >most recent snapshot.

>
> Pardon the ignorant question but how exactly do you make the snapshots?

Do you use NTBACKUP.EXE, or do you use some other tool?
>
> jill
>
>
>
> --
> To s&e^n]d me m~a}i]l r%e*m?o\v[e bit from my a|d)d:r{e:s]s.
>


There are several reasons why Linux is not subject to the type
of deterioration that Windows suffers, e.g.
- People will cheerfully download and run anything that they
can find. They won't eat a sandwich they found in the gutter
but they will double-click any enticing icon.
- Hackers find rich pickings in the world of Windows. The pickings
are far leaner in the world of Linux, so why bother?
- There is an incredibly large number of programs for Windows.
Some of them are poorly written and cause damage.

To create an image, use one of the popular imaging programs
such as DriveImage, Ghost, or Acronis. You can also use zip
if you have a Bart PE CD and if you know how to restore a
PC's boot environment. Ntbackup.exe is not a particularly good
choice because you cannot run it on a blank disk.


 
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