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In this way, it is recommended that you reinstall the system, your system disk is too small, because you have installed some other non-system software in the system disk, so it is even smaller, reinstall the system, and then do not install any software on the system disk, in this way, the system disk is estimated to have 5-6G space, and the rest is occupied by the necessary files of the system.
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Open My Computer >> Tools >> Folder Options >> View >> Remove the hook before "Hide Protected OS Files", and then there will be an extra recycled and a recycler in the drive letter, which is the ** station of each drive letter, it is estimated that only this eats up your space, and you can delete it. Hope it helps.
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Is the station empty?
Are the hidden files revealed?
Are the protected system files showing?
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If you're sure it's non-toxic, check if your documentation is on the C drive, and if so, check to see if there are any files generated by other software or games in the documentation. Then you are checking to see if your virtual memory page is too large, and if the page is set to be too large, the resulting page file is also too large.
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Right-click on the disk, select [Properties], and then select [Disk Cleanup] in [General].
If it is Vista, select all of them in the [Disk Cleanup] tab (if you want to keep hibernation, uncheck the pre-hibernation checkbox), then select [Cleanup] under [System Restore and Shadow Copy] in [Other Options], and finally, [OK].
If it is Win7, select [Clean System Files] first, and then the same as Vista.
XP,I don't remember exactly.,It seems to be similar to Vista's operation.。。
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There are too many hidden files, only to format the C drive and reinstall the system.
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It's the same after I was poisoned last time.,If the antivirus still doesn't work.,I don't know if you need to reinstall the system.,But it seems to be a bit of a fuss.。
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That's the folder for System Restore and the folder for **site.。。。 The system file is still automatically generated after deletion.
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System Volume Information is the folder for system restoration, and you don't have to worry about either of them.
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One is the configuration file of the ** station, and the other is to store the system restore information. Both are automatically created for you by the system. No harm.
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You can hide it and you're good to go.
As long as it doesn't take up your space, it's just hidden.
The first one is the configuration file of the **site, and the other is that the directory where the system restore point is recorded is not a virus and does not affect the use.
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recycler folder:
NTFS file system, NTFS file system will create a recycler folder under each partition, this is our site, there is also a site icon file inside, the name of this file is your current user name, such as: s-1-5-21-436374069-2077806209-1801674531-500.
Every time you create a new user, the system will have an additional ** station with the name of the user ID, all under the recycler folder.
System Volume Information folder:
System label information, which holds information about the system restore. It can't be opened because its permission is system, that is, only the system can access it. If you want to open it, you can type :
cacls "f:\system volume information" /g everyone:f
This command gives all users full control over the System Volume Information folder of the F drive.
After these two folders are deleted, they will be automatically generated again when the system restarts. Good luck.
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Visually inspect win7, right-click on the computer, click on management, and then select - storage - local disk management, you should find that there is unallocated hard disk space inside; Right-click on the list: New.
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Open Computer Management Disk Management to see how big your disk is and if there is any unpartitioned hard disk space.
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Is there only two drive letters in the partition tool to see the hard disk?
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The system is a few G's, buddy, this is normal.
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Mobile phone storage is divided into mobile phone memory and external memory, mobile phone memory is the system and running programs, and general files are in external storage.
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$ files are system folders, also known as "** stations", which cannot be deleted.
As long as you check "Hide protected OS files" in the folder options - View, you will not see it. If you find that the $ file under a certain disk occupies a lot of memory (indicating that the file ** has a lot of things, make sure there are no important programs or files you need), and you really want to delete it, right-click on the desktop.
On the **site - properties - put the "do not move the file into the ** station when deleting, but delete it completely" that selection.
, and then you can enter any disk to delete the $ folder (because it will be automatically restored after the deletion of the ** station file, the recovered disk $ file memory will default back to the original minimum kb, reducing the memory usage of the hard disk).
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The first one is the folder of the ** station. The second one seems to be some data file of the system, both of which are automatically generated by the system. It's not a virus, you can't delete it.
The reboot is there again. As long as it doesn't take up a lot of space. You can leave him alone.
Put the folder option in"Show hidden files or system files"Put a check on the front and you won't be able to see it.
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This is a normal system file.,The first is the ** station of each disk.,The second is "System Volume Label Information".,Storage is the backup information of the system restoration.。
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It can't be deleted, this is the Windows system's own ** station and system restore backup file, each drive letter has, normal. See if they're weak? The reason is because you set the show hidden files, otherwise these will not be displayed by default.
So no need to worry, normal.
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Press F8 to enter safe mode when powered on. Then use anti-virus software to check and kill.
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Is it an XP system or a Win7 system? Is it a laptop or a desktop? What is the model? Is there a dual system installed? It needs to be specified before you can judge what the cause is.
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The computer prompts that 80% of the time has been used, such as the floating window of the 360. This doesn't mean that it takes up 80% of your hard drive space, but that it takes up 80% of your computer's resources, such as CPU, graphics card, memory, etc. If you only run a few programs like this, obviously your computer configuration is too low, so try rooting the memory module first.
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Close background programs, clean junk, and speed up your computer.
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This shows 80% of the memory usage, which has nothing to do with the size of the hard disk. Your computer's memory should be very small, or you have a lot of memory-intensive software, it is recommended to add a memory module.
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That's 80% of your running memory
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This 80% is memory usage, not hard disk capacity. The memory capacity of the average home computer is about 4G. The more software you turn on, the more memory you use. For example, if you open an Internet Explorer, you will have to eat 50M memory.
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This shows the memory usage.
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Can you send the ** of your system files? Show up in a detailed list It depends on what system you have installed Ghost system is mostly about 7G or so Virtual memory accounts for 2g Some of the system files are hidden You send a picture to help you look at the class.
It seems that you don't show all the hidden files in the C drive, it is better to show "Hide protected OS files" as well, so that you can see what files are taking up space. >>>More
Awesome, it can be copied so quickly.
I don't know if there is a Vista optimizer, if there is, it will be easy to do.
Find the computer management in the control panel, generally in the performance ......Management tools ......Computer management. >>>More
Absolutely, I don't have a graphics card and a CPU, but the graphics card is 7300 128M, CPU dual-core, the memory is larger than yours, and the play is very good, and the picture quality is the lowest, with a resolution of 1280*800. >>>More