N
Nonny
Bruce Chambers wrote:
|ceed wrote:
||Not Me wrote:
||
|.......
|
|
||There are safe registry
||cleaners out there like CCleaner (www.ccleaner.com) used by millions
||without problems.
|
|
| That is completely untrue. There is NO such thing as a "safe"
|registry cleaner. There is also NO such thing as a registry cleaner
|that serves any useful purpose that cannot be perform with much safer
|tools.
If we expand on this a little I may agree: No application which adds or
removes stuff from the registry is safe.
Blanket statements like that are highly questionable. You just said
that any application that adds to the registry is unsafe. Ridiculous.
I guess we could discuss the
term "safe", but if you look at the staggering changes some programs do
to the registry during install, and what some programs leaves behind, I
do not think a cleaner which removes stuff that isn't in use is less
safe.
Granted there is probably a lot of "stuff" in the registry that has
been left behind and is no longer needed... but what harm is it doing?
It most certainly isn't slowing the computer down.
The problem with "removes stuff" isn't that it removes something that
is no longer being used (again, there is no benefit from doing that)
but it's what _other_ "stuff" it removes.
IF the cleaner presents you with a list of things it's about to
remove, are YOU able to make an accurate assessment as to what to
approve and what to deny?
I doubt it.
So there is the very good chance that something will be deleted that's
needed, and the average user won't have a freaking clue how to get out
of the mess. It might not even show up immediately. Might show up
several days later when a particular program won't run, or when an
attempt to run it crashes the system. Etc., etc. How will the user
be able to trace that back to the "cleaning and optimizing"?
Another question is if registry cleaners are useful. I do not
really know.
Since one can't show a performance gain by "cleaning and optimizing"
the registry, and since there are countless examples of things that
may gone wrong when such actions are performed, I'd say that they are
not useful to anyone other than technicians who repair inoperable
Windows systems for a living.