Registry cleaner

A

adrian

Hi,
I've just downloaded a registry cleaner, it can help you to delete the
invalid entry in the registry, and it got an undo option. But I am just
wondering if things really goes wrong, can the undo option really restore to
the original position? Thx.

Adrian
 
J

Jim Byrd

Hi Adrian - Well, the answer is that that depends upon how many and what
kind of changes you've made to the Registry since the Reg Cleaner's restore
file was made - see below for why this is so.

In my experience all of these Reg cleaners, even the best, are fraught with
danger. I advise against using them except in one specific instance, that
is when you have one that is capabible of doing specific Reg searches, and
you NEED (not just WANT) to remove the remaining traces of something that
didin't get uninstalled correctly. (and you didn't have foresight enough to
install it using Total Uninstall,
http://www.geocities.com/ggmartau/projects/projects.html, in the first
place.)

Lastly, if you must screw around with your Registry, then at least get
Erunt/Erdnt, and run it before you do the Reg clean. You'll then have a
true restore available to you. Read below to see why you might not just
using the Reg cleaner's restore:

Get Erunt here for all NT-based computers including XP:
http://home.t-online.de/home/lars.hederer/erunt/index.htm I've set it up to
take a scheduled backup each night at 12:01AM on a weekly round-robin basis,
and a Monthly on the 1st of each month. See here for how to set that up:
http://home.t-online.de/home/lars.hederer/erunt/erunt.txt, and for some
useful information about this subject.

This program is one of the best things around - saved my butt on many
occasions, and will also run very nicely from a DOS prompt (in case you've
done something that won't let you boot any more and need to revert to a
previous Registry) IF you're FAT32 OR have a DOS startup disk with NTFS
write drivers in an NTFS system. (There is also a way using the Recovery
Console to get back to being "bootable" even without separate DOS write NTFS
drivers, after which you can do a "normal" Erdnt restore.) (BTW, it also
includes a Registry defragger program). Free, and very, very highly
recommended.

FYI, quoting from the above document:

Note: The "Export registry" function in Regedit is USELESS (!) to make a
complete backup of the registry. Neither does it export the whole registry
(for example, no information from the "SECURITY" hive is saved), nor can the
exported file be used later to replace the current registry with the old
one. Instead, if you re-import the file, it is
merged with the current registry, leaving you with an absolute mess of old
and new registry keys.


--
Please respond in the same thread.
Regards, Jim Byrd, MS-MVP



In
 
J

Jim Byrd

YW, Adrian - I'm glad you found it useful.

--
Please respond in the same thread.
Regards, Jim Byrd, MS-MVP



In
 
T

tony

In my experience all of these Reg cleaners, even the best, are fraught with
danger. I advise against using them except in one specific instance, that
is when you have one that is capabible of doing specific Reg searches, and
you NEED (not just WANT) to remove the remaining traces of something that
didin't get uninstalled correctly.

Fully aware that WANT is not equal to NEED (I raised a couple of
children...), I would like to fully understand what implications this
inequality has for the XP registry. For instance:

My new computer came with the inevitable bundled programs which
inevitably get in each other's way (such as Roxio and Media Player); I
ask XP to remove Roxio (I was startled by the way to find out that is
occupies more than 600 Mb!!! -- which is a discussion for another
day), but when I look with Regedit, there are sure enough Roxio
entries left behind throughout the Registry. Not only that, but there
are also traces of Real Player, a program which did not come installed
on the new computer and which I never installed myself.

All the principles of good stewardship that I have learned in my life,
lead me to WANT to mop up this slop, but if I do not really NEED to
remove this useless (or is it useless?) overburder am I being simply
paranoid and compulsive?
(and you didn't have foresight enough to
install it using Total Uninstall
http://www.geocities.com/ggmartau/projects/projects.html, in the first
place.)

Thank you for this suggestion: Total Unistall is now a fixture of my
system, and I've already used it on several occasions. I did not yet
unistall anything it has monitored, and while I'm convinced it does it
better than XP's removal facility, I'm curious to see whether it fully
cleans up the Registry.
Lastly, if you must screw around with your Registry, then at least get
Erunt/Erdnt, and run it before you do the Reg clean. You'll then have a
true restore available to you.

That's my next step.

T.
========================
Tony Roder, speaking his mind....
 
G

Guest

I have never ever had a problem with Norton utilities WinDoctor program. It doesn't clean them all but it gets a good bunch of crap out. Backup before making any changes and sometimes I go in and search for what I want and remove it myself such as Roxio

If you have AOL 8 or 9 Real player was installed when you install it.
 

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