How can I get rid of "Dounments and Settings" folders as well as s

D

Display name

other folders?

http://home.mchsi.com/~myemails/folders.jpg

I would like to delete them since, in all my years of using windows I never
use this crap and I'd like to get rid of everything I can. Is there a way to
move the information, or make it and a few other folders invisible? Can I
move them and direct windows to another folder where I have all of these
moved to?

Thanks
 
D

DL

Doc & Settings are system folders, you can move them elsewhere I believe,
but since the sys uses them whats the point?
Nvidea, Intel are probably Folders created when you installed / updated
drivers.
The two temp folders have likely been created by some app you have on your
system
The 88fd...... is probably an update
 
D

Display name

Can I movie IN windows? I want to clean up things. I would like only have a
few folders on the C drive. I would prefer if I could delete really. They
wouldn't be there as shortcuts, not places to save junk. I don't save
anything on my C drive. I know they try to make the pc more friendly but some
people don't like all that crap.

Is there an app to just make some folder not visible unless otherwise
looking for them.....in a certain app?
 
S

Shenan Stanley

Display said:
other folders?

http://home.mchsi.com/~myemails/folders.jpg

I would like to delete them since, in all my years of using windows
I never use this crap and I'd like to get rid of everything I can.
Is there a way to move the information, or make it and a few other
folders invisible? Can I move them and direct windows to another
folder where I have all of these moved to?

You *do* use "Documents and Settings". That is where your stuff is. Your
user profile is stored under that directory. Your "My Documents", you
"Desktop", your Internet Explorer "Favorites", etc.

The "Intel" and "NVIDIA" folders in your posted picture are from thie
installation of drivers for your hardware. Likely an NVidia Video card and
an Intel Network Card. You may not actually be using anything actively
under these - you could rename the folders, if you see no side effects,
delete them.

"TempIE4" - looks like something you created.

"883fd4d2e6850f2665" is a temporary folder created by some update. Likely -
if you visited http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com/ and did a custom scan and
installed all the updates (non-hardware) from there and rebooted - you could
delete that folder without issues.

"Config.msi" is the same as the previous folder.

"EbuDllTmpDir" is the same as the previous folder.

You are - for all intents and purposes - bothering over nothing. I would
think of it as OCD. In the end - it makes no difference. Your concern
should be over where you store *your* files and not where the system is
storing its files. ;-)

Worried over disk 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

Used Disk Cleanup?
Is hibernate turned on and do you use that feature?
Uninstalled unnecessary applications lately?

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 256MB..

- 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 256MB. (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/

DX Hog Hunt
http://www.dvxp.com/en/Downloads.aspx

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 $100 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. ;-)
 
D

DL

Installing certain driver updates, or indeed hardware, may result in folders
being created on the system drive. Whether some / all of these can be moved
/ deleted I cannot say
Other apps you use may create temp folders, depending on the options of
these apps you may be able to direct them to another drive. In most cases
temp folders can be deleted.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314843/ for docs & settings

But I have to ask what is the point of moving them from one drive to
another, your not cleaning anything up, simply moving them to another drive.
Docs & Settings is a windows system folder containg files required for the
operation of your system and apps.
In Explorer Folder options, dont enable view hidden files
 

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