HelloI am using Wise Disk Cleaner is really very indignant and disgusted by me this stupid tool I deleted (removed) at least 50% of all video (avi) and mp4 file, which were at least 300 GB (gigabytes) of data very valuable for me!
How did I become this fatal problem? There was this fact that I ran module: Advanced CLEANER - Msconfig I box: FIND INVALID SHORTCUTS (SLOW) and FIND EMPTY (0 BYTES Slower) and there are a few extensions (/. Diz, * tmp and etc ...) to choose stayed all factory-set to anything I did not set forth.
And like me to remove some avi files without my knowledge!
So your program uses FAKE functions on stripping avi & mp4 video files without my knowledge?
Wise Disk Cleaner is really a very bad tool that you can not help but rather will aggressively breaking down me and my HDD.
How To Make Me Wise Disk Cleaner for damage caused'll be there to recover to solve problems and mainly 100% recovery of my lost video files you deleted your software: Disk Cleaner Wise without my knowledge. I never disagreed that Wise Disk Cleaner removed my avi files without my knowledge!
I look forward to feedback to solve this very annoying problem too
1. First, could you please check, since you said that Wise Disk Cleaner deleted 300 GB of your video, so there is 300GB more space in your disk, right? I was thinking is there any chance that you changed the properties of these video files to Hidden, Wise Disk Recovery will not scan the hidden files.
2. You scan your F disk with Wise Data Recovery again, but this time don't choose any type, just scan the whole F disk for deleted files. Then you re-arrange the scan result by the file size from big to small. Video files, especially HDD are typically big, right? Please check if you can find these video files on the top of the scan results.
3. Try any other recovery tool, if they can't find the lost videos either, there are two possibilities: Have you used the Disk Eraser feature to clean disk F. Or you moved the video files to another disk?
I don't know if I need to do this on my MacBook like I have to on my PC, but is there a way to do a disk cleanup or is that not needed. I have deleted some programs and want to make sure I can optimize my processing speed.
Keeping up to date is especially important for complex software that modifies the operating system, such as device drivers. Don't install such modifications unless they're absolutely necessary. Remove them when they are no longer needed. Before installing any Apple update, you must check that all system modifications that you use are compatible. Incompatibility with third-party software is by far the most common cause of difficulties with system updates.
As a rule, you should avoid software that changes the way other software works. Plugins for Photoshop and similar programs are an obvious exception to this rule. Safari extensions, and perhaps the equivalent for other web browsers, are a partial exception. Most are safe, and they're easy to get rid of if they don't work. Some may cause the browser to crash or otherwise malfunction. Some are malicious. Use with caution, and install only well-known extensions from relatively trustworthy sources, such as the Safari Extensions Gallery.
Only install software that is useful to you, not (as you imagine) to the computer. For example, a word processor is useful for writing. A video editor is useful for making movies. A game is useful for fun. But a "cache cleaner" isn't useful for anything. Cleaning caches is not an end in itself.
Never install any third-party software unless you know how to uninstall it. Otherwise you may create problems that are very hard to solve. Do not rely on "utilities" such as "AppCleaner" and the like that purport to remove software.
4. Don't install bad, conflicting, or unnecessary fonts. Whenever you install new fonts, use the validation feature of the built-in Font Book application to make sure the fonts aren't defective and don't conflict with each other or with others that you already have. See the built-in help and this support article for instructions. Deactivate or remove fonts that you don't really need to speed up application launching.
5. Avoid malware. Malware is malicious software that circulates on the Internet. This kind of attack on OS X was once so rare that it was hardly a concern, but malware is now increasingly common, and increasingly dangerous.
In OS X 10.7.5 or later, downloaded applications and Installer packages that have not been digitally signed by a developer registered with Apple are blocked from loading by default. The block can be overridden, but think carefully before you do so.
6. Don't fill up your disk/SSD. A common mistake is adding more and more large files to your home folder until you start to get warnings that you're out of space, which may be followed in short order by a startup failure. This is more prone to happen on the newer Macs that come with an internal SSD instead of the traditional hard drive. The drive can be very nearly full before you become aware of the problem.
While it's not true that you should or must keep any particular percentage of space free, you should monitor your storage use and make sure you're not in immediate danger of using it up. According to Apple documentation, you need at least 9 GB of free space on the startup volume for normal operation.
To use a Mac effectively, you have to free yourself from the Windows mindset that every computer needs regular downtime maintenance such as "defragging" and "registry cleaning." Those concepts do not apply to the Mac platform.
A well-designed computing device is not something you should have to think about much. It should be an almost transparent medium through which you communicate, work, and play. If you want a machine that needs a lot of attention, use a PC.
yes, disk usage although I understand that with years passing the files somehow got fatter and fatter for reasons that are beyond my understanding, I think that maybe there are still ways to get rid of most of them. I opened this thread to discover how
Long ago I was running ubuntu and one day I decided to check if the packages I install with programs are uninstalled with the program. I was shocked to find out half of them were still there.
So I got the habit, I always reinstall after a certain amount of time.
When your computer is getting full, BleachBit quickly frees disk space. When your information is only your business, BleachBit guards your privacy. With BleachBit you can free cache, delete cookies, clear Internet history, shred temporary files, delete logs, and discard junk you didn't know was there. Designed for Linux and Windows systems, it wipes clean thousands of applications including Firefox, Adobe Flash, Google Chrome, Opera, and more. Beyond simply deleting files, BleachBit includes advanced features such as shredding files to prevent recovery, wiping free disk space to hide traces of files deleted by other applications, and vacuuming Firefox to make it faster. Better than free, BleachBit is open source.
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Instead of executing each of the previous prune commands individually, you could use the docker system prune command, which performs a prune on containers, images and a few other less-storage-hungry components within Docker.
After a bit of Googling, I came across this thread on the Docker GitHub repository with others having a similar problem. It seems that no matter how few images you have, the Docker VHDX refuses to hand back the disk space it once needed. Sadly, the only solution that works is to go into Docker Desktop, click on the troubleshoot button, and hit the Clean / Purge data button.
It seems like disk cleaner apps try to completely clear out the cache folder when deleting "junk," which includes the AudioUnitCache folder. If Logic has to keep scanning plug-ins on startup, its probably because that folder keeps being deleted. I found this out about a year after discovering the problem.
This is not the first time this happens to me and every time it is an issue since it fills up the disk and it wont release the space until (at least) I either reboot the media agent or add a advsetting key (CLEANUP_TEMP_DB_DAYS = 0). In this case, particular case, i have done both and still wont release the space.
Long story short, any time I request a browse from a job that is available on disk but is fairly old, the media agent kicks off a Index Restore, since those indexes are not on media agent anymore. The index kicks in, and thats when the operation starts to fill up the disk. (always with NDMP (V2) that are massive).
So I currently have a media agent that its all of space for a Browse that was initiated days ago and didnt even actually let me browse due to the operation of restoring the index. So I closed that browse operation yet the Index Restore kept going. Used the key mentioned and restarted the services and still nothing. Tried load balance workflow which was not helpful.
Thanks for the reply @Jon Kuzmick I`m not quite sure I follow. The index restore to my understanding was only kicked off because of a attempt to restore a file from a NDMP client. Since I actually did not restore anything, in fact I cancelled the browse attempt, the index restore kept going until it filled up the disk. So this is not a backup operation that is filling up the disk, in fact I had 900GB before the restore attempt. I can not think that in a matter of few hours because of a cancelled restore operation my Index cache filled almost 1TB and there is no way to claim that space back. Again Ive had this issue in the past as I mentioned and the key had helped, but this time it didnt.
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