Registry Booster

B

BillW50

TC said:
I was about to do a free system scan with the registry booster on
http://www.liutilities.com/products/campaigns/plib/rb/

It claims to be a certified Microsoft partner. Is it really safe? If
not, what's the safest way to scan for and correct any possible
registry errors?

Registry cleaners can be very dangerous. As they can delete things they
do not understand and screw up your system. If you still want to go
ahead, back up your registry first.
 
P

Poprivet

TC said:
I was about to do a free system scan with the registry booster on
http://www.liutilities.com/products/campaigns/plib/rb/

It claims to be a certified Microsoft partner. Is it really safe? If
not, what's the safest way to scan for and correct any possible
registry errors?

Well, they're reliable AFAIK, though I never noticed anything about their
being an MS "partner". I think I'd take that with a grain of salt without
doing some research on them.

I suppose as long as all it did was rearrange sort orders and like things
it'd be OK, but to be honest, I'd rather use Microsoft's own BootViz for XP,
which has a regirsty "optimize" feature. All the optimization really does
is make an educated guess on the order that registry items are run within
the hives; it doesn't make any registry changes, and you wouldn't want it
to. I HAVE had it help me out a couple of times though.
So if it were me, I'd look up BootViz for XP and give it a go rather than
liutils. My opinion, anyway.

What problems are you experiencing that make you think this is the way to be
researching/testing? There may be better options.

Regards,
Pop`
 
W

Wesley Vogel

After you download and run the FREE registryboosterplc.exe it will find
errors whether you have any or not and you will get an offer to purchase
something that will fix these errors.

At $29.95, today only, marked down from $39.95.
http://www.liutilities.com/products/registrybooster/

Doesn't matter if they are partners or not, it is snake oil and they want to
sell you some.

If you really want a registry cleaner, there are free ones.

I use EasyCleaner.

But you have to know what you are doing or you can screw up badly. This
applies to any registry program or the Registry Editor (regedit.exe) that
comes with XP.

EasyCleaner is a small program which searches Windows' registry for entries
that are pointing nowhere.
http://personal.inet.fi/business/toniarts/ecleane.htm

[[EasyCleaner creates .REG-file from all entries deleted on the same
session, and by double-clicking the *.REG-file you can add those previously
deleted entries back to the registry. i.e. EasyCleaner makes backup (Undo
files) that you can use to replace something that you deleted using
EasyCleaner.]]

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In
 
B

Bruce Chambers

TC said:
I was about to do a free system scan with the registry booster on
http://www.liutilities.com/products/campaigns/plib/rb/

It claims to be a certified Microsoft partner.


Which means they paid a significant sum of money for permission to use
the logo.

Microsoft Partner Program Overview
https://partner.microsoft.com/global/40009570

Is it really safe?


I seriously doubt it. But, even if it were perfectly safe, there'd be
no point in wasting money on it. Registry "cleaners" provide very
little benefit, other than to the owners of the companies selling them.

If not,
what's the safest way to scan for and correct any possible registry errors?


Why do you think you need to clean your registry?

What specific *problems* are you actually experiencing (not some
program's bogus listing of imaginary problems) that you think can be
fixed by using a registry cleaner? If you do have a problem that is
rooted in the registry, it would be far better to simply edit (after
backing up, of course) only the specific key(s) and/or value(s) that are
causing the problem. After all, why use a chainsaw when a scalpel will
do the job? Additionally, the manually changing of one or two registry
entries is far less likely to have the dire consequences of allowing an
automated product to make multiple changes simultaneously.

The registry contains all of the operating system's "knowledge" of
the computer's hardware devices, installed software, the location of the
device drivers, and the computer's configuration. A misstep in the
registry can have severe consequences. One should not even turning
loose a poorly understood automated "cleaner," unless he is fully
confident that he knows *exactly* what is going to happen as a result of
each and every change. Having seen the results of inexperienced people
using automated registry "cleaners," I can only advise all but the most
experienced computer technicians (and/or hobbyists) to avoid them all.
Experience has shown me that such tools simply are not safe in the hands
of the inexperienced user.

The only thing needed to safely clean your registry is knowledge
and Regedit.exe. If you lack the knowledge and experience to maintain
your registry by yourself, then you also lack the knowledge and
experience to safely configure and use any automated registry cleaner,
no matter how safe they claim to be.

Further, no one has ever demonstrated, to my satisfaction, that the
use of an automated registry cleaner, particularly by an untrained,
inexperienced computer user, does any real good. There's certainly been
no empirical evidence offered to demonstrate that the use of such
products to "clean" WinXP's registry improves a computer's performance
or stability.

I always use Regedit.exe. I trust my own experience and judgment
far more than I would any automated registry cleaner. I strongly
encourage others to acquire the knowledge, as well.


--

Bruce Chambers

Help us help you:



They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary
safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. -Benjamin Franklin

Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do. -Bertrand Russell
 
G

Guest

Pop...

In the last few days I've received a couple of svchost.exe error messages.
My computer also seems to be running a lot slower lately.
Thanx for the advice, I'll look up BootViz. I was pretty sceptical about
liutilities. Where can I get it?. It doesn't seem to be avilable on the
website....
 
R

Rock

TC said:
I was about to do a free system scan with the registry booster on
http://www.liutilities.com/products/campaigns/plib/rb/

It claims to be a certified Microsoft partner. Is it really safe? If not,
what's the safest way to scan for and correct any possible registry
errors?

Avoid registry cleaners. There is very little benefit to running one, and
there always exists the possibility it will remove something that's needed
later, causing problems down the road. Unless you are knowledgeable in the
use of the registry, and only use a cleaner as a guide to suggest changes,
not allowing it to make those changes, and then researching the items it
flags to determine if they really need to be changed, don't use one.

Do a Google search in these newsgroups for the many discussions about
registry cleaners.
 
D

db

i read your response
regarding the issue with
svchost.exe

this link might be informative
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/314056

incidentally, there was a update
a few weeks ago that destabilized
the svchost.exe file.

it seems that the issues were
resolved by simply renaming the
corrupted svchost.exe file and
the o.s. would silently recreate
it.

i had been suggesting to
rename it to something like
svchost.bak
I was about to do a free system scan with the registry booster on
http://www.liutilities.com/products/campaigns/plib/rb/

It claims to be a certified Microsoft partner. Is it really safe? If not,
what's the safest way to scan for and correct any possible registry errors?
 
P

Poprivet

Well, looks like a double whammy here; 1, MS spells it BootVis now and 2,
it's no longer available from the MS site. The funny thing is, my copy of
it is spelled with a Z (bootviZ), not an S.

You can read some on it here:
http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/system/sysperf/fastboot/default.mspx

Here's a description of it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BootVis

And, it's still available from here among other places:
http://www.soft32.com/download_19687.html
Caveat: be sure it says it's for XP.
Since MS doesn't provide it for download any longer, there may be a good
reason for it; so I guess I'd now have to say "use at your own risk".
Sorry for the runaround.

Pop`
 
W

Wesley Vogel

Stay away from BootVis.exe! BootVis has not been supported by Microsoft or
available from them for almost four years.

As long as your Prefetcher is working you do not need BootVis. Prefetch
does the same thing as BootVis.exe, it just takes three reboots.

<quote>
BootVis.exe Tool for System Manufacturers
Updated: September 19, 2003

About Bootvis.exe
Bootvis.exe is a performance tracing and visualization tool that Microsoft
designed to help PC system designers and software developers identify
performance issues for boot/resume timing while developing new PC products
or supporting software.

Please note that Bootvis.exe is not a tool that will improve boot/resume
performance for end users. Contrary to some published reports, Bootvis.exe
cannot reduce or alter a system's boot or resume performance. The boot
optimization routines invoked by Bootvis.exe are built into Windows XP.
These routines run automatically at pre-determined times as part of the
normal operation of the operating system.
<quote>
from...
http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/system/sysperf/fastboot/BootVis.mspx

This explains the XP boot optimization routines (Prefetching)...

A little background on Windows XP/BootVis and "prefetching".
http://www.raxco.com/support/windows/pd80/PerfectDisk80_faqs.cfm#15

If your machine is running slow get rid of the malware and perform some
system maintenance.

Why is my computer running so slow, it used to be much faster?
http://www3.telus.net/dandemar/slowcom.htm

Restore Your Computer's Performance
http://www.microsoft.com/WindowsXP/expertzone/columns/northrup/restoreperf.asp

--
Hope this helps. Let us know.

Wes
MS-MVP Windows Shell/User

In
 
G

Guest

Thanx for all the advice. I decided not to mess with anything. Except from
being a bit slow sometimes, my computer is running normally.... so if it
ain't broke, I won't fix it.
 

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