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Top 5 List For Cleaning Up Your Hard Drive

Thursday, March 27th, 2008

Gnomie techmarshal from our chat room writes:

Hey Chris,

I’m not new to your live feed, but I am new to the chat room. My handle is techmarshal and I thought I would send you this top five list. So here it goes…

  1. Get rid of the programs that you never use or have just forgotten about. These programs not only take up hard drive space but also can slow down your system with unecessary processes.

  2. Look at your music and picture library and see if you have any duplicates that are not needed. If you have a lot of files, then you can download programs that scan for duplicate files. The program that I use is Easy Duplicate Finder from majorgeeks.com. It’s safe and very effective.
  3. Get a high capacity flash drive and copy needed but not very often used files over to it. This will help clear your hard drive and you will still have those important files easily accessible at any time.
  4. Convert files into a smaller format. For instance, if you have a lot of videos in mp4 format, you can convert them to a much smaller flv format. The program I use is MediaCoder. It’s free and converts many different formats.
  5. Use a file finder to search for the largest files on your hard drive. There are many different programs to do this — like Large File Finder. Simply choose the unneeded files and delete them. It’s that simple.

Top 5 Ways To Improve Your Computer’s Speed

Tuesday, March 18th, 2008

Gnomie Hai-Shuo Shun writes:

Slow computer getting you down? Wish you could speed up your system so that games won’t crawl by like a slide show permanently set to slow? Well look no further! I shall share five easy steps that you can take to improve your system’s speed! Most of them are free of charge, and all of them should have some effect on your system. So without further ado, we begin with:

  1. Remove spyware and adware from your system. Have you noticed recently that ads seem to pop up whenever you go to a Web page? Or that Internet speeds are about that of diseased livestock? Your system’s probably chock full of spyware. What to do? Well, thankfully there are several things you can do. First, download either Spybot-S&D or Lavasoft’s Ad-Aware, and run it. This should remove most if not all of the spyware and adware on your system. Neither of these are particularly robust, however, so we move on to:

  2. Remove viruses from your system. Get yourself a decent virus scanner program. Big names include MacAfee, Symantec, or Norton. By the way it should be mentioned that virus scanners like the Big Three tend to be huge. Big, beefy programs that can chew up RAM faster than Dudley Dursley chewed up Harry’s birthday cake. If this is a problem for you, take a look at avast! avast! is a free virus scanner that can be downloaded, but be careful. Phishing sites love to pretend to be “free virus scanner software” and so you have to be careful. Yes, avast! is a respected name and is not a virus, but only if you actually download it and not some trojan.
  3. Defragment your hard drive with the disk defragmentation tool, usually located in Start / Programs / Accessories / System Tools. This useful little program will improve performance by compacting your data so that your programs aren’t all located in tiny little bits. Some people might argue this point, saying that defragmentation doesn’t actually improve anything, but look at it this way: it never hurts at worst, and at best has a chance of improving your runtime! So where’s the loss?
  4. Remove dust. Buy some cans of compressed air (yes I’m aware of the irony of purchasing a can of air. No, I do not wish to purchase any bridges today). Using this compressed air, blow the dust out of your system. That dust does your CPU no favors and a thick, liberal coating of dust tends to collect when you leave your computer running in a dirty room. Oh and by the way, after you’ve blown all that dust into the air, it’ll settle. All over your carpet. So you might wanna vacuum later. Just an idea.
  5. Clean your registry. CCleaner is a good registry fixer that’ll fix all those broken things in your registry. By the way, don’t go mucking about in the registry without backing it up first. If you do not do this, then I cannot be legally responsible for any time rifts, space distortions, or world wars caused by unexpected changes made by CCleaner. That said, properly done, a registry change often helps in improving performance. Also check your startup programs: there are programs that are set to start as soon as Windoze boots, and this can cause Windoze to start up slower. Removing a few (AIM is a good one) might improve your startup process. You might keep your hair a bit longer, too.

One final bit of advice. Oftentimes I’ll see on PC-building Web sites people wondering why their computer is “running so slowly even though they have the best gear.” The word of advice? Check your PSU (Power Supply Unit). How far do you suppose you’d get if your car’s gas tank had a maximum capacity of 2 gallons of gas? Would you want such a car? Well, your “awesome gear” won’t get too far on a puny PSU either. If your computer’s operating much slower than you’d expect from your hardware, consider replacing your PSU with one that can actually handle your power-hungriest parts (usually your CPU and GPU). Calculators for what wattage of PSU you might need are all over the Web. Just to be safe it might be better to go 50 watts or so above the recommended, just in case you decide to add something else later.

Top 5 Keep Your Computer Alive Tips

Tuesday, February 19th, 2008

Gnomie Chris Dorn writes:

Dear Chris, I have seen all the top 5 tips and I have decided to pitch in to the community and give some of my own.

  1. Keep your computer in an open area and make sure that the fan/fans for your computer have plenty of breathing space.
  2. Don’t abuse your computer by installing an operating system that requires more RAM than the computer currently has, or fear the pain of a slow computer.
  3. I highly recommend that you purchase a UPS (uninterruptible power supply) for your computer. This will keep your computer from crashing during power outages, and will protect your computer from low and high voltage occurrences.
  4. Use a virus checker regularly. Everyone should use a virus checker. The best type of protection is continuous monitoring from a dedicated anti-virus program.
  5. Keep a backup of your system handy! If by any chance your hard drive breaks, its always a great idea to keep a back up of your computer in case.