recovery files

C

charles cashion

Vista Home Premium
I wanted to deleted the older recovery files,
but found that I could delete all or nothing.
?Q: Is there a way to selectively delete
recovery points files?
Charles
 
C

Curious

You are confusing the recovery partition files which your PC manufacturer
provides with the original system so that you can rebuild the entire OS with
the Restore Points which the OS provides so you can back up to a previous
date/time.
 
C

charles cashion

Curious said:
You are confusing the recovery partition files which your PC
manufacturer provides with the original system so that you can rebuild
the entire OS with the Restore Points which the OS provides so you can
back up to a previous date/time.
Let me see if I can word this correctly...
I thought I could selectively remove restore points.
I am certain that I have done this, but I cannot remember
how long ago I did this.
I just discovered that I can remove all or nothing.
Am I on the wrong screen?
Charles

Restore points might be (almost) a red herring. I would
like the answer to selective removal of restore points,
but the real problem is: something is filling my hard drive.
When I first started using my new Vista Home Premium,
my total disk usage was about 11GB. Now C:\Windows
takes 22GB while c:\users\cmcnuz takes about 2.5GB.
 
M

Michael Walraven

you cannot (as far as I know) selectively remove recovery points. You can
remove all but the last. The system will remove the oldest one if it needs
the space.

Michael
 
P

peter

There is a program called CCLEANER that lets you
remove individual restore points among other things
its is quite safe but I would suggest not running the
registry cleaner part of it

try Googling for it. It is a free download

peter
 
R

Richard G. Harper

You cannot selectively delete restore points - they are threaded and require
a complete start-to-end path to work correctly. Removing one or more in the
middle would result in unusable restore points. Same for the files that
comprise them - all or nothing.
 
C

charles cashion

Richard said:
You cannot selectively delete restore points - they are threaded and
require a complete start-to-end path to work correctly. Removing one or
more in the middle would result in unusable restore points. Same for
the files that comprise them - all or nothing.
I ended up deleting ALL.
It released about 18GB.

When I purchased this machine, it had a 120GB
hard drive and only about 11GB were used. It
now has 30GB in use and everything under
c:\users\charles counts for 4.5GB.
Somebody (something?) is hoarding bytes! !
 

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