Blue Files -Gerry

  • Thread starter Thread starter George-NY
  • Start date Start date
G

George-NY

Hi Gerry,

Thank you for all the suggestions to save space on my computer.

The last one was (remove all but the latest restore points)

How is that done? I go to restore and it only lets me create or restore a
new point.

Thanks again for the info and for taking your time to help.

George - NY
 
George-NY said:
Hi Gerry,

Thank you for all the suggestions to save space on my computer.

The last one was (remove all but the latest restore points)

How is that done? I go to restore and it only lets me create or restore a
new point.

Thanks again for the info and for taking your time to help.

George - NY
First, you turn off system restore. XP removes all restore points.
Then, after the disk activity quits, you start system restore.

There is a way to delete all but the last point, but I never want to do
that.
Jim
 
Turn off system restore and then turn it on again. See this link from my
website: http://vistasupport.mvps.org/turn_off_system_restore.htm

--

--
John Barnett MVP
Windows XP Associate Expert
Windows Desktop Experience

Web: http://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org
Web: http://vistasupport.mvps.org
Web: http://www.silversurfer-guide.com

The information in this mail/post is supplied "as is". No warranty of any
kind, either expressed or implied, is made in relation to the accuracy,
reliability or content of this mail/post. The Author shall not be liable for
any direct, indirect, incidental or consequential damages arising out of the
use of, or inability to use, information or opinions expressed in this
mail/post..
 
George ignore the link I gave you in my last post. That link refers to
Windows Vista. Here is the link for XP from my XP Support website:
http://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org/how_do_i_clear_system_restore_po.htm

My apologies for the confusion

--

--
John Barnett MVP
Windows XP Associate Expert
Windows Desktop Experience

Web: http://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org
Web: http://vistasupport.mvps.org
Web: http://www.silversurfer-guide.com

The information in this mail/post is supplied "as is". No warranty of any
kind, either expressed or implied, is made in relation to the accuracy,
reliability or content of this mail/post. The Author shall not be liable for
any direct, indirect, incidental or consequential damages arising out of the
use of, or inability to use, information or opinions expressed in this
mail/post..
 
Thanks guys.

BOY! Wish I knew you guys were here a few days ago when it cost me a hundred
bucks to get my computer free of some Trojan I had.

George - NY
 
Here are some security Programs for your computer:

http://www.spybot.info/en/index.html

Spybot Search & Destroy 1.6 is a very good, FREE Anti-Spyware Program.
Download, install, update, and immunize your System with it.
Then SCAN with it.
Update it, and scan your System once a fortnight.

http://www.javacoolsoftware.com/spywareblaster.html

SpywareBlaster 4.1 is a non-intrusive, FREE Anti-Spyware Program (no
scanning by you!).
SpywareBlaster prevents the installation of many so-called spyware, adware
and malware programs by disabling the CLSIDs of popular spyware ActiveX
controls, and also prevents the installation of any of them via a webpage
Update it once a fortnight.

http://www.malwarebytes.org/mbam.php

Malwarebytes is as the name says, a Malware Remover!
For the Free version scroll down their page to either download from
Download.com, or Major Geeks.com

Download, install, and update.
 
From: "George-NY" <[email protected]>

| Hi Gerry,

| Thank you for all the suggestions to save space on my computer.

| The last one was (remove all but the latest restore points)

| How is that done? I go to restore and it only lets me create or restore a
| new point.

| Thanks again for the info and for taking your time to help.

| George - NY



You said in your other thread that that was your first post.

When you make a post that becomes your thread. If you want to discuss it further based
upon the same subject mattter, stick to that thread and please do NOT create a new thread
like you did here.
 
George

The correct answer is.

Select Start, All Programs, accessories, System Tools, Disk CleanUp,
More Options, System Restore and remove all but the latest System
Restore point.

This was in my earlier post. It is also what Unknown told you.

Turning System Restore Off and On is a bad move. It leaves you without a
Restore Point.

--



Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
George-NY said:
Thank you for all the suggestions to save space on my computer.

The last one was (remove all but the latest restore points)

How is that done? I go to restore and it only lets me create or
restore a new point.

Thanks again for the info and for taking your time to help.

Information on how to clear up hard disk drive space...

If you are comfortable with the stability of your system, you can delete the
uninstall files for the patches that Windows XP has installed...
http://www3.telus.net/dandemar/spack.htm
( Particularly of interest here - #4 )
( Alternative: http://www.dougknox.com/xp/utils/xp_hotfix_backup.htm )

You can run Disk Cleanup - built into Windows XP - to erase all but your
latest restore point and cleanup even more "loose files"..

How to use Disk Cleanup
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/310312

You can turn off hibernation if it is on and you don't use it..

When you hibernate your computer, Windows saves the contents of the system's
memory to the hiberfil.sys file. As a result, the size of the hiberfil.sys
file will always equal the amount of physical memory in your system. If you
don't use the hibernate feature and want to recapture the space that Windows
uses for the hiberfil.sys file, perform the following steps:

- Start the Control Panel Power Options applet (go to Start, Settings,
Control Panel, and click Power Options).
- Select the Hibernate tab, clear the "Enable hibernation" check box, then
click OK; although you might think otherwise, selecting Never under the
"System hibernates" option on the Power Schemes tab doesn't delete the
hiberfil.sys file.
- Windows will remove the "System hibernates" option from the Power Schemes
tab and delete the hiberfil.sys file.

You can control how much space your System Restore can use...

1. Click Start, right-click My Computer, and then click Properties.
2. Click the System Restore tab.
3. Highlight one of your drives (or C: if you only have one) and click on
the "Settings" button.
4. Change the percentage of disk space you wish to allow.. I suggest moving
the slider until you have just about 1GB (1024MB or close to that...)
5. Click OK.. Then Click OK again.

You can control how much space your Temporary Internet Files can utilize...

Empty your Temporary Internet Files and shrink the size it stores to a
size between 64MB and 128MB..

- Open ONE copy of Internet Explorer.
- Select TOOLS -> Internet Options.
- Under the General tab in the "Temporary Internet Files" section, do the
following:
- Click on "Delete Cookies" (click OK)
- Click on "Settings" and change the "Amount of disk space to use:" to
something between 64MB and 128MB. (It may be MUCH larger right
now.)
- Click OK.
- Click on "Delete Files" and select to "Delete all offline contents"
(the checkbox) and click OK. (If you had a LOT, this could take 2-10
minutes or more.)
- Once it is done, click OK, close Internet Explorer, re-open Internet
Explorer.

You can use an application that scans your system for log files and
temporary files and use that to get rid of those:

Ccleaner (Free!)
http://www.ccleaner.com/

Other ways to free up space..

SequoiaView
http://www.win.tue.nl/sequoiaview/

JDiskReport
http://www.jgoodies.com/freeware/jdiskreport/index.html

Those can help you visually discover where all the space is being used.

If you are concerned over less than 5GB of space total at any given time
being freed up on your hard disk drive - then something is wrong and
you would be better off spending a little and putting in a drive that is
likely 3-8 times as large as what you have not and not concerning
yourself over such a small amount of space OR you seriously need
to consider what you really need on the system and what should be
archived.

Basic housekeeping 101... - in an actual home, if your storage area gets
full - you either have to decide what you really should have in the storage
area and what could go or you have to find a new place to store stuff
that will accommodate everything you need. You don't walk into a
warehouse of cars, look at the filing cabinet in the corner where
you keep all the records for the cars and decide that if you move it out of
the warehouse - you will have more room for cars. ;-)
 
John

The advice in your link is not the best available. You do not have to
keep the reserved space at 12%. You do not mention that it can be
substantially reduced. The Disk CleanUp option achieves the same
objective as your suggestion with less hassle.


--



Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
Unknown said:
I only clear out restore points to reduce the disk space that they contain.
I also only clear out restore points when the system is running trouble
free.
Jim
 
You said in your other thread that that was your first post.

When you make a post that becomes your thread. If you want to discuss it
further based
upon the same subject mattter, stick to that thread and please do NOT create
a new thread
like you did here.



My apologies for the confusion. I see it is very busy here so I will not
post anything unless it is very important.
Again, I'm sorry

George -NY
 
Jim

The default allocation to System Restore is 12% on your C partition
which is over generous. I would reduce it to 700 mb. Right click your My
Computer icon on the Desktop and select System Restore. Place the cursor
on your C drive select Settings but this time find the slider and drag
it to the left until it reads 700 mb and exit. When you get to the
Settings screen click on Apply and OK and exit.

Select Start, All Programs, accessories, System Tools, Disk CleanUp,
More Options, System Restore and remove all but the latest System
Restore point. Run Disk Defragmenter.

These represent a better approach.


--



Hope this helps.

Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
From: "George-NY" <[email protected]>

| My apologies for the confusion. I see it is very busy here so I will not
| post anything unless it is very important.
| Again, I'm sorry

| George -NY

Please DO post. Just keep your subject matter contiguous in one thread.
 
David

To be fair the earlier thread was all about whether uninstall update
folders could be removed. I read the thread and sensing insufficient
disk space was the reason for the enquiry posted a list of suggestions
unrelated to Blue files. George was clearly wanting to clarify one point
in my post as you will see from the subject of the thread. The subject
had shifted to a new one so his action was perfectly reasonable. I am
not sure, however, that some of the advice he got whilst I was at a
local restaurant was quite as good as my lunch.

--



Gerry
~~~~
FCA
Stourport, England
Enquire, plan and execute
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
 
My apologies for not adding that fact, Gerry. However, some of the
information on my site(s) happened to be written over a period of years and
it is not always possible, due to other commitments, to scan through every
single page to see if an update is required. Fortunately my visitors usually
keep me informed of any major improvements needed and I try to update the
page(s) as soon as is practical.

I will take another look at the page when I have some spare time and make
the necessary adjustments.


--

--
John Barnett MVP
Windows XP Associate Expert
Windows Desktop Experience

Web: http://xphelpandsupport.mvps.org
Web: http://vistasupport.mvps.org
Web: http://www.silversurfer-guide.com

The information in this mail/post is supplied "as is". No warranty of any
kind, either expressed or implied, is made in relation to the accuracy,
reliability or content of this mail/post. The Author shall not be liable for
any direct, indirect, incidental or consequential damages arising out of the
use of, or inability to use, information or opinions expressed in this
mail/post..
 
You said:I asked "Why not?
I only clear out restore points to reduce the disk space that they
contain. I also only clear out restore points when the system is running
trouble free.
Jim
Confusion??????
 

Ask a Question

Want to reply to this thread or ask your own question?

You'll need to choose a username for the site, which only take a couple of moments. After that, you can post your question and our members will help you out.

Ask a Question

Back
Top