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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free
Windows XP registry repair tool?I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? I'm also having a problem with my cookies.I have the cookies set to show themselves and they still won't.I know how to delete them other ways but I was curious as to why they started hiding themselves...(not exactly sure where else I could have placed this paragraph within this site.sorry if it's in the wrong pace) Sorry to be such a hassle.I'm not the best at computers and I don't want to mess anything up.I've yet to master all their is to know about Windows XP.. Thank you to those that try to help.I appreciate it. |
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#2
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
gurlgonecrazy wrote:
I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free Windows XP registry repair tool?I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? I'm also having a problem with my cookies.I have the cookies set to show themselves and they still won't.I know how to delete them other ways but I was curious as to why they started hiding themselves...(not exactly sure where else I could have placed this paragraph within this site.sorry if it's in the wrong pace) Sorry to be such a hassle.I'm not the best at computers and I don't want to mess anything up.I've yet to master all their is to know about Windows XP.. Thank you to those that try to help.I appreciate it. Oh good - another flame-war thread. I get to catch it before it goes a-light. gurlgonecrazy, A few will tell you that any tool that claims to clean your registry is just flat lying (someone will probably respond with the words 'snake oil'.) Some will tell you that you can clean your registry if you like, but don't do anything you wouldn't do manually. Research every single item that is about to be removed and have your backups at the ready and current. Things can and do go wrong - better to be safe than sorry. In the same category to me are those who will tell you that you do not *need* to clean your registry. Any increase in speed you get from it, if you notice it, you are nano-perceptive - if there is actually any changes at all. In the end it is your computer, do what you want - but given it is a computer and you have options for backups that not many other things in life give you - you would be unwise not to do those things first (backups, image of the entire machine's hard disk drive, etc.) Some will tell you that you should clean your registry and likely provide you with links to tools. Some will even link to old/new applications that Microsoft themselves provided for the job of cleaning the registry. Others will not tell you much, but instantly disagree with the the people that claim that all registry cleaning tools are a lie. (Again - expect 'snake oil' to come up and maybe some synonym of 'close minded'. Then there will be responses from the first group I mentioned, bickering back and forth until things will break down into stupidness and your very question will be lost in the shuffle. What should you do? That is up to you. Here is what I recommend. Research it. You can read why you should clean your registry and why you shouldn't. You can figure out who said what from each group. You can figure out whose reasons you like more. It's your computer. No matter what, I think you should act wisely and in an informed manner. Just because one person told you that you needed to do this - don't take them at their word. Just because one person told you that doing it would be harmful, don't take them at their word. Figure out what you need/want to do and know *why* you are doing it. If you do not have a backup regime/schedule - get one started. It's the best single thing you can do for yourself and your computer. Nope - it won't help make it faster, it won't keep it clear of viruses and malware - but it gives you something you don't get for most things in life - the ability to go back to a time when everything was "okay". If you decide to clean your registry - at least pick some tool that makes a list of things it finds and you can go through that list choosing what you want to clean and what you want to ignore and then use search engines or even these newsgroups to figure out what is safe to remove, what makes no difference whether or not you remove it and what each thing you are removing does/did and maybe why it was left. Time consuming? Yep. Worth it - could be. It is true that if you delete some of the wrong registry entries - your computer won't necessarily boot into Windows without some work again. Maybe something like CCleaner and then using Google to figure out what all it finds. (I am not recommending you do this - just letting you in on a tool that has benefits to you otherwise and might help you in this endeavor as well.) Look through the found articles of a simple Google search: http://www.google.com/search?q=think...needs+cleaning And you will likely get this link again as well: http://aumha.net/viewtopic.php?t=28099 Try to read through any bickering that starts here as well. All the sides have points, it's up to you which ones you think are good. ;-) -- Shenan Stanley MS-MVP -- How To Ask Questions The Smart Way http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html |
#3
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
Your registry doesn't need cleaning. So-called "registry cleaners" have
no proven value, but these newsgroups are filled with evidence of the harm they cause. [Twayne - our resident curmudgeon - will respond to you shortly.] --- Leonard Grey Errare humanum est gurlgonecrazy wrote: I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free Windows XP registry repair tool?I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? I'm also having a problem with my cookies.I have the cookies set to show themselves and they still won't.I know how to delete them other ways but I was curious as to why they started hiding themselves...(not exactly sure where else I could have placed this paragraph within this site.sorry if it's in the wrong pace) Sorry to be such a hassle.I'm not the best at computers and I don't want to mess anything up.I've yet to master all their is to know about Windows XP.. Thank you to those that try to help.I appreciate it. |
#4
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
gurlgonecrazy wrote:
I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free Windows XP registry repair tool? There are lots of them. But I won't do you the disservice of pointing them out. Why would you even think you'd ever need to clean your registry? What specific *problems* are you actually experiencing (not some program's bogus listing of imaginary problems) that you think can be fixed by using a registry "cleaner?" If you do have a problem that is rooted in the registry, it would be far better to simply edit (after backing up, of course) only the specific key(s) and/or value(s) that are causing the problem. After all, why use a chainsaw when a scalpel will do the job? Additionally, the manually changing of one or two registry entries is far less likely to have the dire consequences of allowing an automated product to make multiple changes simultaneously. The only thing needed to safely clean your registry is knowledge and Regedit.exe. The registry contains all of the operating system's "knowledge" of the computer's hardware devices, installed software, the location of the device drivers, and the computer's configuration. A misstep in the registry can have severe consequences. One should not even turning loose a poorly understood automated "cleaner," unless he is fully confident that he knows *exactly* what is going to happen as a result of each and every change. Having repeatedly seen the results of inexperienced people using automated registry "cleaners," I can only advise all but the most experienced computer technicians (and/or hobbyists) to avoid them all. Experience has shown me that such tools simply are not safe in the hands of the inexperienced user. If you lack the knowledge and experience to maintain your registry by yourself, then you also lack the knowledge and experience to safely configure and use any automated registry cleaner, no matter how safe they claim to be. More importantly, no one has ever demonstrated that the use of an automated registry "cleaner," particularly by an untrained, inexperienced computer user, does any real good, whatsoever. There's certainly been no empirical evidence offered to demonstrate that the use of such products to "clean" WinXP's registry improves a computer's performance or stability. Given the potential for harm, it's just not worth the risk. Granted, most registry "cleaners" won't cause problems each and every time they're used, but the potential for harm is always there. And, since no registry "cleaner" has ever been demonstrated to do any good (think of them like treating the flu with chicken soup - there's no real medicinal value, but it sometimes provides a warming placebo effect), I always tell people that the risks far out-weigh the non-existent benefits. I will concede that a good registry *scanning* tool, in the hands of an experienced and knowledgeable technician or hobbyist can be a useful time-saving diagnostic tool, as long as it's not allowed to make any changes automatically. But I really don't think that there are any registry "cleaners" that are truly safe for the general public to use. Experience has proven just the opposite: such tools simply are not safe in the hands of the inexperienced user. A little further reading on the subject: Why I don't use registry cleaners http://www.edbott.com/weblog/?p=643 AumHa Forums • View topic - AUMHA Discussion: Should I Use a Registry Cleaner? http://aumha.net/viewtopic.php?t=28099 I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... None of which explains why you'd think such action might be necessary. Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? Error messages. And, under computer management, the Event Logs. -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx/kb/555375 They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety. ~Benjamin Franklin Many people would rather die than think; in fact, most do. ~Bertrand Russell The philosopher has never killed any priests, whereas the priest has killed a great many philosophers. ~ Denis Diderot |
#5
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
gurlgonecrazy wrote:
I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free Windows XP registry repair tool?I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? I'm also having a problem with my cookies.I have the cookies set to show themselves and they still won't.I know how to delete them other ways but I was curious as to why they started hiding themselves...(not exactly sure where else I could have placed this paragraph within this site.sorry if it's in the wrong pace) Sorry to be such a hassle.I'm not the best at computers and I don't want to mess anything up.I've yet to master all their is to know about Windows XP.. Thank you to those that try to help.I appreciate it. * What is currently wrong or failing with the registry? * What convinced you that the registry needs to be "cleaned" up? * What constitutes the "cleaning" actions? * What do you expect to gain from the cleanup? * What are you going to do if the registry changes hose over your computer since a restore may not be possible? * What is your recovery strategy from the registry changes? *_Why the uneducated or lazy should never use registry cleaners_* If YOU are not adept at *manually* editing the registry, don't use a tool that you don't understand regarding its proposed changes. Regardless of relinquishing the task to software, YOU are the final authority in allowing it to make the changes. Any registry cleaner that does not request for YOU to give permission to make its proposed changes along with listing each proposed change should be discarded. Do you have a backup & restore plan in place? When (and not if) the registry cleaner corrupts your registry and when you can no longer boot into Windows, just how are you going to restore that OS partition so it is usable again? Even if you use a registry cleaner that provides for backups of its changes so you can revert back to the prior state, how are you going to perform that restore if you cannot boot the OS after hosing over its registry? What about entries in the registry that look to be orphaned under the current OS load instance but are used under a different OS environment? You delete what looks orphaned only to find out that they are required under a different environment. Say there was an unusually high amount of orphaned entries in your registry, like 4MB. By deleting the orphaned entries, you would speed up how long it takes Windows to load the registry's files when it starts up - by all of maybe 1 second. Oooh, aaah. All that risk of modifying the registry to save maybe a second, or less, during the Windows startup. Most folks that clean the registry end up deleting only 10KB, or less. They are doing nothing to improve their Windows load time. Since the registry is only read from the memory copy of it, and since memory is random access, there is no difference to read one byte of the registry (in memory) from the another byte in the registry (also in memory). The extra data in memory for orphaned entries has no effect on the time to retrieve items from the memory copy of the registry because orphaned entries are never retrieved (if they were, they aren't orphaned). Cleaning the registry will NOT improve performance in reading from the memory copy of the registry. The reduced size of the registry's .dat files might reduce the load time of Windows by all of a second and probably much less. And you want to risk the stability of your OS for inconsequential changes to its registry? The same boobs that get suckered into these registry cleanup "tools" are the same ones that get suckered into the memory defragment "tools". A registry cleaner should only be used if you by yourself can correctly cleanup the registry. The cleaner is just a tool to automate the same process but you should know every change that it intends to make and understand each of those changes. After all, and regardless of the stagnant expertise that is hard coded into the utility, *YOU* are the final authority in what registry changes are performed whether you do it manually or with a utility. If YOU do not understand the proposed change (which requires the product actually divulge the proposed change before committing that change), how will you know whether or not to allow that change? |
#6
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
lol, no, but I'll respond to you, who spreads the misinformation.
Registry cleaners are no more likely to cause any harm to a computer than any other program and usually subsntantially less likely than, say, MS applications. You're always saying "these newsgroups are filled with ... " but there are very few of them and what ones do come up are not known, and often suspected to be, something other than the registry that caused the problem. If these groups are "filled ... " they're posting messages only you can see. Hmm, I guess that's a possibility. Just last week I installed an app, than had to remove it, and the removal created a registry problem. Guess what found the problem in mere seconds and repaired it? A registry cleaner! PROVE your claims! Find verifiable evidence that details the mechanism by which they "damage" a computer. Reputable registry cleaners just don't do it and if a situation should arise where something does go awry, they can always back out the changes that were made. How do you get that head through doorways? BTW, notice that you asked for this. Easiest place for the OP to start would probably be with CCleaner. That said, it may well be a process of elimination and simply eliminate the registry as the cause, but even that is good information. Beware the closed minds here; they're easy to spot. Twayne` "Leonard Grey" wrote in message Your registry doesn't need cleaning. So-called "registry cleaners" have no proven value, but these newsgroups are filled with evidence of the harm they cause. [Twayne - our resident curmudgeon - will respond to you shortly.] --- Leonard Grey Errare humanum est gurlgonecrazy wrote: I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free Windows XP registry repair tool?I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? I'm also having a problem with my cookies.I have the cookies set to show themselves and they still won't.I know how to delete them other ways but I was curious as to why they started hiding themselves...(not exactly sure where else I could have placed this paragraph within this site.sorry if it's in the wrong pace) Sorry to be such a hassle.I'm not the best at computers and I don't want to mess anything up.I've yet to master all their is to know about Windows XP.. Thank you to those that try to help.I appreciate it. |
#7
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
Ah, Bruce, the most closed minded, ignorant and lying narcissist
spreading their tripe amongst the others here. In the spirit of correcting misinformation: "Bruce Chambers" wrote in message gurlgonecrazy wrote: I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free Windows XP registry repair tool? There are lots of them. But I won't do you the disservice of pointing them out. Why would you even think you'd ever need to clean your registry? What specific *problems* are you actually experiencing (not some program's bogus listing of imaginary problems) that you think can be fixed by using a registry "cleaner?" Quite a put down. And wrong, of course. If you do have a problem that is rooted in the registry, it would be far better to simply edit (after backing up, of course) only the specific key(s) and/or value(s) that are causing the problem. After all, why use a chainsaw when a scalpel will do the job? Additionally, the manually changing of one or two registry entries is far less likely to have the dire consequences of allowing an automated product to make multiple changes simultaneously. The only thing needed to safely clean your registry is knowledge and Regedit.exe. Right. And what's the learning curve to learn the registry? What is the purpose of ANY program? Manually editing the registry is the fastest way there is for the uninitiated to clobber their machines. It only takes one wrong move in the right place. Perhaps if you understood anything about the registry you could actually help such a person as the OP here rather than put him down. The registry contains all of the operating system's "knowledge" of the computer's hardware devices, installed software, the location of the device drivers, and the computer's configuration. Actually, that's not true; it does not contain "all" of the OS's info. There are bits and pieces of it saved in many other places and you know that but figure you can ignore it because you assume the OP knows less than you do. So you spout your misinformation and jaded opinions for all to observe your ignorance. A misstep in the registry can have severe consequences. One should not even turning loose a poorly understood automated "cleaner," unless he is fully confident that he knows *exactly* what is going to happen as a result of each and every change. By that logic, you must not use any program or application that makes any changes to the registry. THAT is a good trick! It's fear-mongering and nothing more on your part. Having repeatedly seen the results of inexperienced people using automated registry "cleaners," I can only advise all but the most experienced computer technicians (and/or hobbyists) to avoid them all. But that comes from your ignorance on the subject. Experience has shown me that such tools simply are not safe in the Has shown YOU? So, anything that has happened to YOU is something that happens to ALL and thus YOUR opinions must be applied to ALL? You show your ignorance so clearly when you try. hands of the inexperienced user. If you lack the knowledge and experience to maintain your registry by yourself, then you also lack the knowledge and experience to safely configure and use any automated registry cleaner, no matter how safe they claim to be. Prove it. Show me a damage done by every, or just most, registry cleaner in existance, and be certain to include the reliable, reputable ones along with the feces-coders you make up. You can't prove it. You can't even show more than a few perfunctory references to it. If you find it from a reliable source, I'll read it. But you can't do that. More importantly, no one has ever demonstrated that the use of an automated registry "cleaner," particularly by an untrained, inexperienced computer user, does any real good, whatsoever. There's Nor have YOU demonstrated the opposite. While to ME, I've seen, read and experienced it over and over, over the years, you have no such experience to fall back on. All you have is hear-say from unproven, unverifiable resources. certainly been no empirical evidence offered to demonstrate that the use of such products to "clean" WinXP's registry improves a computer's performance or stability. Given the potential for harm, it's just not worth the risk. Yes, there has. I provided it to you. You ignored it and were a black hole with any response to it. Over the years I've done so three times, in fact. I even offered to participate in a test with you and develop records concerning the results of those evaluations but once again you were a black hole, too cowardly to participate. Another clear demonstration of your ignorance on the subject. Granted, most registry "cleaners" won't cause problems each and every time they're used, but the potential for harm is always there. The potential harm is "always there" with ANY software code you run. The fact is, good registry cleaners, or which there are quite a few now, do less harm than non-registry cleaners. They are better designed. They are stable. They are reliable. You on the other hand are a liar when you claim much of this misinformation to be true. And, since no registry "cleaner" has ever been demonstrated to do any good (think of them like treating the flu with chicken soup - there's no real medicinal value, but it sometimes provides a warming placebo effect), I always tell people that the risks far out-weigh the non-existent benefits. More ignorance. See previous comments; still lying and ignorant. I will concede that a good registry *scanning* tool, in the hands of an experienced and knowledgeable technician or hobbyist can be a useful time-saving diagnostic tool, as long as it's not allowed to make any changes automatically. Oh: That's what's required to answer YES to, "link to x.rtf not found; repair?" when you know you just deleted it? Or "link to x.com broken: found on drive D: Repair?" THAT requires your specialist? Your are a king of the ignorant, I swear. But I really don't think that there are any registry "cleaners" that are truly safe for the general public to use. Huh! NOW you just "think" it! What about all that prose and crap you just went through making what you hope are factual statements as though they were true, not that you "think"! Experience has proven just the opposite: such tools Well, YOUR expeience is apprently a bunch of tripe and hogwash. Again, "YOUR" must apply to ALL, right? Riiiigghht!! simply are not safe in the hands of the inexperienced user. A blatant, inconsistantly stated lie. A little further reading on the subject: Why I don't use registry cleaners http://www.edbott.com/weblog/?p=643 AumHa Forums . View topic - AUMHA Discussion: Should I Use a Registry Cleaner? http://aumha.net/viewtopic.php?t=28099 lol! Yeah, right, write or assist with an article/post whatever and then refer to it as "proof"! Ya gotta love it! Only a moron ... Thanks again for the opportunity to expose you for the misinformationist you are. It's been fun. Twayne` I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... None of which explains why you'd think such action might be necessary. Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? Error messages. And, under computer management, the Event Logs. |
#8
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
"VanguardLH" wrote in message
gurlgonecrazy wrote: I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free Windows XP registry repair tool?I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? I'm also having a problem with my cookies.I have the cookies set to show themselves and they still won't.I know how to delete them other ways but I was curious as to why they started hiding themselves...(not exactly sure where else I could have placed this paragraph within this site.sorry if it's in the wrong pace) Sorry to be such a hassle.I'm not the best at computers and I don't want to mess anything up.I've yet to master all their is to know about Windows XP.. Thank you to those that try to help.I appreciate it. * What is currently wrong or failing with the registry? * What convinced you that the registry needs to be "cleaned" up? * What constitutes the "cleaning" actions? * What do you expect to gain from the cleanup? * What are you going to do if the registry changes hose over your computer since a restore may not be possible? * What is your recovery strategy from the registry changes? It'd be nice if you really were interested in those answers, but you aren't. All you would have done before my post here is put the OP down with your condescending, copycat attitude as you enjoy the hand stuck up your ... . *_Why the uneducated or lazy should never use registry cleaners_* My responses to the king of misinformaiton also apply to you, his puppet. You come off like a miserable old man who has no power in the world and tries to get it back this way. It wouldn't be so bad if you didn't actually know better. Twayne` |
#9
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
Twayne wrote:
"VanguardLH" wrote in message gurlgonecrazy wrote: I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free Windows XP registry repair tool?I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? I'm also having a problem with my cookies.I have the cookies set to show themselves and they still won't.I know how to delete them other ways but I was curious as to why they started hiding themselves...(not exactly sure where else I could have placed this paragraph within this site.sorry if it's in the wrong pace) Sorry to be such a hassle.I'm not the best at computers and I don't want to mess anything up.I've yet to master all their is to know about Windows XP.. Thank you to those that try to help.I appreciate it. * What is currently wrong or failing with the registry? * What convinced you that the registry needs to be "cleaned" up? * What constitutes the "cleaning" actions? * What do you expect to gain from the cleanup? * What are you going to do if the registry changes hose over your computer since a restore may not be possible? * What is your recovery strategy from the registry changes? It'd be nice if you really were interested in those answers, but you aren't. All you would have done before my post here is put the OP down with your condescending, copycat attitude as you enjoy the hand stuck up your ... . *_Why the uneducated or lazy should never use registry cleaners_* My responses to the king of misinformaiton also apply to you, his puppet. You come off like a miserable old man who has no power in the world and tries to get it back this way. It wouldn't be so bad if you didn't actually know better. Twayne` You could take each of my points and present a counterpoint but you're not willing to expend that effort. And considering your childish attitude and how it has degenerated over time in these newsgroups, I have no interest in debating the merits, hazards, and worthlessness of registry cleanup with you. When you hear that alarm, it is to remind you that it is time to take your medications, all 17 of them. |
#10
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
The best free Registry Cleaner I have seen is:
Eusing Free Registry Cleaner 2.5.1 http://www.eusing.com/free_registry_...ry_cleaner.htm __________________________________________________ ____________ "gurlgonecrazy" wrote in message ... I have been cleaning my computer and I was wondering if there is a free Windows XP registry repair tool?I updated all of my registry and whatnot a couple months back but have no recollection where I had the tool.I'm not sure that anything needs repairing or updating but I wanted to check to make sure.I'm trying to keep up to date with my drivers and everything but I'm not sure where that tool is now... Is there a Windows XP program within my computer that would show me if anything should be taken care of? I'm also having a problem with my cookies.I have the cookies set to show themselves and they still won't.I know how to delete them other ways but I was curious as to why they started hiding themselves...(not exactly sure where else I could have placed this paragraph within this site.sorry if it's in the wrong pace) Sorry to be such a hassle.I'm not the best at computers and I don't want to mess anything up.I've yet to master all their is to know about Windows XP.. Thank you to those that try to help.I appreciate it. |
#11
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Registry repair tool for Windows XP?
If talking about free tools, CCleaner is probably the best, second
choice would be Registry Easy, but it's paid tool. After all check some review over the net http://fixexe.com/best-5-registry-fix-and-repair-tools/ Or do some more Googling |
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