· Disk Cleanup can be found on the Start menu in All Programs/Accessories/System Tools/Disk Cleanup. It is only in Windows , XP, and Vista and only available on NTFS drives. When you check the Compress Old Files item and click on the OK button, it does not delete anything (unlike the other items). Instead it goes through your hard drive and compresses any files that are older than . · The Compress Old Files option made running Disk Cleanup so slow it was useless - better it should run faster so people will use it. My Computer. My Computer. Computer Type: PC/Desktop. OS: Windows 7 x CPU: Intel Core2 Extreme Q GHz. Motherboard: EVGA CK-NF Memory: 8 GB. Graphics Card: Radeon R7 X. · DELETEDAYS=5. find $ {LOGDIR}! -name \*.gz -mtime + {COMPRESSDAYS} -exec gzip {} \; find $ {LOGDIR} -name \*.gz -mtime + {DELETEDAYS} -exec rm {} \; This script would compress all files in your log dir which are older than 3 days and delete all .
DELETEDAYS=5. find $ {LOGDIR}! -name \*.gz -mtime + {COMPRESSDAYS} -exec gzip {} \; find $ {LOGDIR} -name \*.gz -mtime + {DELETEDAYS} -exec rm {} \; This script would compress all files in your log dir which are older than 3 days and delete all compressed files which are older than 5 days. If your hard drive contains old data files, it’s advisable to delete them all. To do this just select the files and hit “Shift + Delete” keys. 5. To uninstall programs. First click on the “Start” button on your desktop taskbar, and then select “Control Panel” tab from the pop-up window; Under the Programs section, just click the “Remove a Program” link. Then locate the program file that you feel as unwanted and wish to uninstall, and click on it once. Click the Remove files button at the top to clear everything out. Mark Hachman / IDG The “temporary files” section usually contains a number of files that can be safely deleted.
Less is beautiful, at least when it comes to email attachments. Make your files smaller before you send them. No one likes to wait for a long download. Large email attachments cost the recipient time, space, and money. Be considerate and co. Forget third-party utilities: Windows has a built-in tool for "zipping" a batch of files. Here's how to use it. By Rick Broida, PCWorld | Smart fixes for your PC hassles Today's Best Tech Deals Picked by PCWorld's Editors Top Deals On Great. Your internet tubes may have grown significantly in the past 10 years—making file downloads faster than ever—but that doesn't mean you don't still deal with compressed files every day. Fact is, nothing saves time sharing files like a good f.
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