Tech Support > Computers & Technology > Software & Applications > registry cleaner that is safe
registry cleaner that is safe
Posted by FTR on June 26th, 2006


My notebook is getting slow and I guess it's because of installing and
uninstalling progs. What is the SAFEST registry cleaner (incl. registry
backup), according to your experience? I am not a registry expert so I
prefer a safe to a fast or a very thorough cleaner.

Thanks
Frank

Posted by Kaiser Soze on June 26th, 2006


In article <449fd8df$0$885$ba4acef3@news.orange.fr>, news.ftr@free.fr
says...
Link
http://www.ccleaner.com/
--
Kaiser Soze
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The greatest trick the devil ever pulled was
convincing the world he didn't exist.

Posted by Morgan Ohlson on June 26th, 2006


On Mon, 26 Jun 2006 14:53:52 +0200, FTR wrote:

Hijack this ?


Morgan O.

Posted by Lew/+Silat on June 26th, 2006



"Morgan Ohlson" <morgan.ohlson@comhem.se> wrote in message
news:64xajpsb3bqk$.1ep7vfdwojegz$.dlg@40tude.net.. .

HijackThis is not a registry cleaner. Do not use this program unless you
know what you are doing.


--
Lew/+Silat



Posted by beenthere on June 26th, 2006



"FTR" <news.ftr@free.fr> wrote in message
news:449fd8df$0$885$ba4acef3@news.orange.fr...
Try Easycleaner from
http://personal.inet.fi/business/toniarts/ecleane.htm
--
bw..OJ



Posted by BobS on June 26th, 2006


Have to also vote for CCleaner as suggested. I've tested a number of these
and personally use jv16 Tools most of the time with CCleaner as the "safe
cleaner". Using jv16 (not free) afterwards in aggressive mode manages to
find more dead entries.

So far I've used CCleaner for about a year and cannot say that it ever once
cleaned out something that caused me a problem later. It's not aggressive
and it "appears" to error on the safe side which means it does not clean
everything but it is one of the best I've ever used for freeware.

Bob S.




Posted by PaulFXH on June 26th, 2006



BobS escreveu:

I've used both CCleaner and EasyCleaner over the last year or so. While
neither has caused any problems for me, I'm also not sure that either
has led to a major performance improvement in my computer.
What did work for me, however, was a clean-install of my OS (WinXP),
Not only was performance very noticeably better but a significant
number of unexplained peculiarities which had developed on my machine
just dissappeared.
Although it's not a quick fix and has to be carried out cautiously, I
can thoroughly recommend a clean install of the OS to dramatically
improve the performance of a wilting computer.
Paul


Posted by Ron May on June 26th, 2006



On Mon, 26 Jun 2006 23:43:19 +0200, Rednax
<Xander2005rednax@hotmail.com> wrote:

I'd go with RegSeeker also. Like Rednax, I've been using it for years
on a bunch of different computers and Windows versions and haven't had
a single problem by deleting green AND red entries (I always quickly
eyeball the red ones first just as an extra precaution.)

In addition to being a good cleaner, it's probably the BEST tool for
tracking down registry keys by keyword or phrase when you're trying to
troubleshoot a particularly annoying problems like a program that
insists in running at startup no matter how many times you disable it,
or one that changes your file associations every time you reboot.

And it does backup your changes so you can undo them if needed.

--
Ron M.

Posted by FTR on June 27th, 2006


Rednax wrote:
Seems that CCleaner and Regseeker receive the majority of votes. Thank
you for sharing your experience

- Frank

Posted by HCL on June 27th, 2006



I found Regseeker difficult to use. It show me many entries in each
section selected from its left pane. But it selected none when I choose
'select green' or 'select red'. Maybe I just don't know how to use it,
anyone comment?

Posted by Daniel Mandic on June 27th, 2006


Hi Frank!



A combination of some programs may help. E.g. Easycleaner, Pagedefrag -
sysinternals (look also to other www.sysinternals.com utils),
Regcompact etc.

Manual deleting and optimizing of the registry is the most effective,
but also the most difficult way to stay fast and responsive as a fresh
setup .



Best Regards,

Daniel Mandic

Posted by Ron May on June 27th, 2006



On Wed, 28 Jun 2006 01:16:19 +0800, HCL <HCL@HCL.com> wrote:

The visial cue on "selection" is rather subtle. The background color
changes slightly. If you "select all green items" but you don't have
any green items among the dozen or so that are in view, you probably
will NOT be able to tell the difference between selected and
unselected items when you scroll down through the entries.

Try this:

* Select "Clean Registry"

* Select the registry hives you want to clean.

* Click "OK" and let it run until it's finished.

* Note the number of items found in the lower right area of the
screen.

* Make sure you have at least SOME green items, and make sure you can
see them on the current screen.

* Click the "Select all" link, then from the submenu, "select all
green items. At this point, you should notice a slight background
color change on the green items you're looking at.

* Right click on any green item and choose "Delete selected items.

* The green entries should now be gone. You should also see that the
number of found items is much smaller.

Alternatively, if you just want to see if items can be "selected" and
"deselected, you can do the scan, then just click the "Invert
selection" button several times. You should see the color change with
each click.

--
Ron M.


Posted by Ron May on June 28th, 2006



On Wed, 28 Jun 2006 01:16:19 +0800, HCL <HCL@HCL.com> wrote:

Whoops! I just re-read your post again, AFTER sending my first reply,
and now I think I know what's happening:

The red and green entries ONLY apply to registry keys when using the
"Clean Registry" option. The red entries have red text descriptions
below each key, and the green entries have green text descriptions
below each key.

If you are looking at OTHER options, like "Startup Entries" for
instance, there ARE no "red" or "green" entries to select. You select
those entries the same way you select items in Windows Explorer,
including shift-click (range of items) and Ctrl-click (select multiple
items one at a time.)

Sorry for the confusion.

--
Ron M.

Posted by Morgan Ohlson on June 28th, 2006


On Mon, 26 Jun 2006 11:12:02 -0700, Lew/+Silat wrote:

But it cleans registry....


Morgan O.

Posted by FTR on June 28th, 2006


Daniel Mandic wrote:
I hesitate to do THAT! I know when I was a kid I opend a clockwork and
the spares went in all directions. I think tweaking the registry
manually is just that if done by me.

Cheers
Frank




--
/me is listening to (Artist - Back In The Days-60's 70's & 80's-Live
D.J.) at (Chilly's Vibes/Real Old School Radio/A Smooth Blend Of
Funk,Disco,R&B,& Motown/From The 60's 70's & 80's) using Screamer Radio
v0.3.7

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src="http://sfx-images.mozilla.org/affiliates/Buttons/110x32/trust.gif"/></a>

Posted by HCL on June 28th, 2006


Ron May wrote:
Many thanks! Your 2 posts are very details. Before you tell me what
the program will do, I was really confused because I cannot see any
green or red entries. Although I still cannot see green or red till
now, I think I can handle it next time I scan. Thx in advanced.

Posted by Daniel Mandic on June 29th, 2006


FTR wrote:




You are charming the system administrators.


A clock is analogue, the registry is digitally. That means, even things
disabled (e.g. disabling an unneeded feature on your Gfx Card, only
reachable via the registry), need to be enabled in a seperate area.
Always two-side dependant....

A radio turned off is off . There is no need to tell the radio
stopping all receptions, by switching something to 0 or off.
Setting and optimizing the Radio is similar to registry-tuning, but
more proper, as you can use hand, eyes and ears.

Makes 3:2 :-)



Not being good (experienced) in digital, lies in the nature of the
human. Humans are already two-sided and are more forced to go back to
one, or linear - using his/her both sides. And more than two!

E.g. Football. You can play it with your both sides, one ball (probably
the way) and one Goal (destination? :-)). = Analogue.
Digitally it would be one goal, where you have to put in the ball, and
one negative goal not to put in. But as you know, the footballer may
choose also the negative goal

Too much digital closes your sides :-|
It's more boring, but everything what lies inbetween two digital values
is absolute. E.g. CAD CAM, MIDI




Best Regards,

Daniel Mandic

P.S.: When I deinstall something, I remember the exact name of the
software, go to reg. and delete any leftover entries - that's also
helpful if some apps are not functioning even when reinstalling them,
bez of left behind entries.
Don't forget to restart... you can never restart to often, but too
less. Real changing (for standard user) of the reg. only happens when
restarting the machine. You can change more values in one session....
Not deletable entries can be delete enabled, pull-down menu -
edit...properties...


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