![]() Almost all of it was thrown out as trash at some time! The keyboard and mouse, and the Graphics Card cost about £20 altogether. Other Info: This is seriously old kit - dating back to early 2005. Hard Drives: 2 Seagate 500 GBs, Maxtor 300GB, WD160 all rescued from old Sky and NTL STB throwouts. Monitor(s) Displays: Hewlett Packard HP vs17 Sound Card: on-board Realtek High Definition Audio Graphics Card: GeForce 9500GT 512MB driver version 341.92 Motherboard: Fujitsu Siemens ASUS P5GD1-FM/S AMI BIOS 1005.1001 System Manufacturer/Model Number: Fujitsu Siemens Scaleo P AMI BIOS 1005.1001 ĬPU: Intel socket 775 Pentium 4 540 HT 3200 Prescott I don't know about the BSOD issue yet, but the restart issue is still a problem after the reinstall. It hangs when trying to restart and I have to shut it down and restart manually. In addition, restart does not seem to work right. Also, prior to reinstall I was getting frequent BSOD's with various different error codes, never the same one. Any ideas on why my disk is so full despite a clean reinstall of W10? Any suggestions on how to fix it? I appreciate your help. I am not at that computer right now and cannot remember the exact chip specs, but I think it has a 2.5 MHz speed. I have a Dell desktop with 4 GB RAM and 580 GB hard drive. Right now I am just trying to get some free disk space. I did backup to Macrium, but that is another issue. After the clean install of W10, Windows explorer still shows I am using 500 GB of disk space and only have 80 GB of free space. I did this because my 580 GB hard drive showed only 20 GB of free space despite the fact that I really don't store that much data. To speed up your Internet browsing, pages, graphics and other page elements are stored in your browser's cache.I recently did a clean install of W10 from a USB drive that I downloaded the media on from Microsoft. This will restore the file to its original location.Īnother source of "disappearing" hard disk space are the Temporary Internet Files. If Windows or any program complains about a missing file, just select your Recycle Bin, find the file and right-click on it. If you don't run into any problems, you can empty the Recycle Bin. To be on the safe side, delete your files to the Recycle Bin, and leave them there for a week or two. You'll have to delete these on a regular basis, as they are recreated with every Help file execution. ![]() gid - Help-related file when you run a Help file, it creates a GID to make future accesses to that particular help file a tad quicker. They are re-created if you do a search in a Help file, so these should be regularly scanned for and deleted. E.G., not worth having around unless you use Help files on a daily basis. ![]() fts - Help-related file when you perform a search with a Help file, this is created to make all future searches be performed quicker. ![]() cnt - Help-related file ever notice those tables of contents when you launch certain Help files? If you don't need a table to help you navigate through a Help file, delete these. bak - Backup file when a new (data) file is created, some programs will rename the old version with a. If you don't use these files (for trouble shooting), delete them, you can save quite a bit of space! When Windows (or an application) experiences a crash, a memory dump is performed. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |