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Registry Cleaning: Spring Is As Good A Time As Any

Registry Cleaning: Spring Is As Good A Time As Any

Registry Cleaning: Spring Is As Good A Time As Any

Your spring cleaning plans probably don’t include your computer, but it’s not a bad idea. The registry is one of the most important components of the operating system; without it, your Windows computer would not be able to run. Using a registry cleaner will help keep your computer running well.

Why Is The Registry So Important?

The registry is a control center. Applications that need the operating system’s services register their requirements here. The computer’s operating system reads the registry in order to allocate the system’s resources properly.

The registry isn’t so much a file as it is a database. Parts of the registry interact with each other; entries get written to the registry regularly, and they’re removed sometimes as well. Therein lies the problem. Sometimes. As in sometimes, these entries aren’t removed. Sometimes they’re just left to do nothing other than take up space in the computer’s memory. The computer has to keep track of these pointless entries as long as they remain in the registry.

Abandoned information isn’t the only thing that slows down the registry. Information is sometimes deliberately written into the registry to take up valuable computer resources, make the computer perform a specific action each time it starts up, starts a particular application, or at another defined time.

Virus and malware writers like the registry a lot. Much of their malicious work is written into the registry, and complete removal of the virus or malware requires that the malware’s registry entries be removed. Malware can even change or corrupt existing registry settings, which can produce a slow computer.

Aside from the malicious material that may find its way into your computer’s registry, completely innocent (and necessary) entries can get corrupted. The registry is spread out over several files on the computer, and the interaction between these files can sometimes go haywire.

Add RegCure To Your Spring Cleaning Tools

Using a registry cleaner like RegCure will ensure that your computer works the way it was intended to. More than a million users have downloaded and installed RegCure and the results are impressive. Users report that problematic computers that might otherwise have been on their way to the trash heap have been resurrected and rejuvenated; they work like they did fresh out of the box.

Doing a little spring cleaning on your Windows registry could make all the difference in your computer’s performance. RegCure also makes a full backup of your registry before making any changes, so you can always revert to the previous state if you’re unhappy with RegCure’s results.

If you’re planning to do a little spring cleaning, download your copy of RegCure today!
Photo Credit: Sidewalk Story, via Flickr

Do You Really Need A Registry Cleaner?

Do You Really Need A Registry Cleaner?

Do You Really Need A Registry Cleaner?

The evolution of Windows has left the diehard PC user with a number of not-so-elegant software designs to contend with. These approaches have led to an abundance of registry cleaners and other products designed to help your PC operate smoothly. But do you really need a registry cleaner? In a word, probably.

Where Did The Registry Come From?

In an effort to make a PC more secure, Microsoft has changed the way the operating system interacts with the user and the computer programs that run on it. For many years, the Windows operating system has used a “registry” to keep track of all kinds of important and behind-the-scenes interactions and details that most users are unaware of.

In earlier versions of Windows, the registry – which is spoken of as a single file – was really a collection of three very important .dat files. Every element of the operating system, the user profile, and the appearance (and operation) of the computer were controlled in some way by the data stored in these three files. Collectively, they formed “the registry.”

Housing so much data (some registry files can balloon to hundreds of megabytes) in so few files was a bit of a threat, so more modern versions of the Windows registry consist of a small army of files, stored in multiple locations around the computer. The registry is more dispersed now, and it’s a little more elegant when it comes to loading information into the computer, but the registry can still get crammed with all kinds of fluff and leftover entries that do nothing but slow the computer down and increase the potential of a conflict.

The Need For A Registry Cleaner

In older versions of Windows, a registry cleaner is an absolute requirement. As you add files and applications to your computer, or make configuration changes, your registry grows. Uninstalling programs (or worse, just deleting program files) doesn’t always clean up the hundreds of registry entries that a single program can make or leave behind. The computer must read and load these abandoned registry entries each time it boots up, or tries to run an application. Imagine what happens when the computer reads and loads information for a program that no longer exists on the computer!

Malware and spyware can also foul up the registry. Anti-spywayre and anti-virus software can miss these useless entries in the registry, allowing the same kinds of delays and conflicts to arise. Don’t waste your time waiting for your computer to time out, and don’t let leftover malware entries cause problems for you and your computer. Instead, apply a highly rated registry cleaner like RegCure to the problem.

Photo Credit: Timothy Valentine