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Det

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  1. A little uggly solution to include the "Excluded Files" and/or "Cookies" list is to just install Chrome at the side of Chromium and do a shortcut from "%LocalAppData%\Google\Chrome\User Data" to "%LocalAppData%\Chromium\User Data". That way CCleaner can be run normally for Chromium, which "User Data" directory it detects as Google Chrome's. But I'm not sure how Chrome and Chromium like the fact that they share the same settings. As a side note I excluded "C:\Users\Det\AppData\Local\Chromium\User Data\Default\Cache\{data_0,data_1,data_2,data_3,index}" from the cache clean as those caches are some Chromium's own caches that get created even with a new Chromium profile with "about:blank" as the startup page.
  2. Did you write stuff to your partition (meaning did you use your PC) when defragging? Also could you post some screenshots of Defraggler after an Analysis of the C: partition ("Drive C:" and "File list" tabs)? It's *possible* that your system files (C:/Windows - the ones being used), page file (pagefile.sys), hibernation file (hiberlif.sys) and Volume Shadow Copies alltogether have produced such a high fragmentation but taken/given that your C:(?) is _31%_ fragmented, it would be rather a theory than a fact.
  3. I take it Defraggler would skip the 2 fragments in my situation. If that's the answer, no more needs to be said . Now you have . Nice hat btw.
  4. Thanks, but this wasn't a problem but just a generic question . But I'd be interested to know what exactly would Defraggler do if e.g. you had a 1GB file that had been splitted into 2 fragments, both being say 500MB equally. Now the two files would have a 30MB gap between each other and during the Analysis that gap was just continuous free space but during the Derfrag some file was written to fill the gap between the two fragments. What would Defraggler do and how would it inform the user through the GUI? ps. If you disable all the 'unnecessary' auto update stuff, Search Indexing, e.g. it is not so hard to have a 'solid state' for your data in your partition. In my case I virtually every time have to do something myself (delete or write new data) to have the need of defragging my Win 7 owned NTFS partition two times in a row.
  5. Should the defrag process be started all over again after e.g. writing a 10 mb file to the partition? It never really occured to me how Defraggler (or any other defragmentater software) handles spaces that were free when analyzing but later on had data on them after the user wrote new stuff to the partition (and thus filling empty clusters).
  6. Gah, lost my train of thought. Of course I have both in 'Program Files (x86)' E: It was because I had the beta latest beta version of firefox (3.6.4 (6)) and not the stable one (3.6.3).. phfft. E: Wait, no it wasn't. It was because Firefox's AppData wasn't ordered how it was supposed to be. In ~\AppData\Roaming\Mozilla\Firefox I didn't have the folder "Profiles" which is supposed to hold all the profile folders in one place - mine is "hvl6td1u.default", which was in the root folder itself.
  7. With my x64 Windows 7 CCleaner won't detect that I've got Firefox installed. I uninstalled Firefox and placed it on the default folder (C:\Program Files (x86)\Mozilla Firefox) but that was still a no go. So what can I do? - Thanks
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