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TomF

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  1. Thanks for replying but WHERE exactly did you come-up with this verbiage (link)--or are you just saying you know this is true from experience with the product. There do seem to be a lot of people (who have posted online about this) who seem to think their software will go on indefinitely.
  2. There are conflicting reports about the Pro version for Home use as to how long the product will function e.g. auto-update before you have to pay again. Some users have said Pro for Home means "updates itself forever" and others have stated that once you register you get Pro functionality for "one year" then you must pay again. So what is the answer--I have read the license agreement (at least, the only one I could find which is this one http://www.piriform.com/legal/software-license/ccleaner-professional and in section 4 it talks about "annual update fees" without saying what they are. So it seems if I buy "CCleaner Professional for Unlimited Home Use" for $34.99 then I can install to all my home PCs but after a year...what? What happens? Does CCleaner stop updating itself until I pay for a new license? Or is the annual fee instead about "support" and the auto-updating will continue? There must be users here who have purchased Pro--what is your experience >1 year?
  3. Today I tried ticking "Compact Databases" for my Firefox and Thunderbird applications and as I watched it work, I noticed that the program was working on databases that were long-ago saved-out (backed-up) to a couple of my Network drives!? It made the "Compact Databases" progress very very slow, given I suppose that my Comodo Internet Security (firewall, executable, virus checking) was watching the network activity, and in fact I aborted the "clean" when it seemed to get stuck on an old Tbird backup out on a NAS. Where would CCleaner get the information/knowhow to leave this computer that it's running on, and the profiles FF and TBird are using on this PC, and go-out onto the LAN and try to compact old (backed-up) profiles I may have saved out there? I looked in the Registry and could find no clues. Is there any way to stop this behavior?
  4. Thanks a lot for your speedy reply, I will try that!
  5. In 2.01.507 (using WindowsXP Pro SP2) to save all of our cookies (we have two User Accounts, both are Administrator-level) I have placed into the Exclude option the folder entries: C:\Documents and Settings\User1\Cookies\*.* C:\Documents and Settings\User2\Cookies\*.* When I check Internet Explorer, which of course includes checking the Cookies box there, and "Analyze", it does not show that it will delete any cookies, but when I "Run Cleaner" the cookies are deleted anyway, BUT ONLY FOR THE USER I AM LOGGED-IN AS. It appears to retain cookies for the "other" user (that is not logged-in). I want to use the above new feature/method to save our cookies because when running CCleaner I sometimes have forgotten to clear the Cookies checkbox in Internet Explorer. If there is a workaround to this anomalous behavior by all means please let me know!
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