Todos os dias oferecemos software com licenças GRATUITAS que do contrário você teria que comprar!
WinSysClean X11 PRO 21.0.0.550 esteve disponível como oferta em 9 de janeiro de 2023
Com mais de 2300 funções de limpeza e reparo, o WinSysClean reduz os arquivos inúteis ao mínimo e faz com que o Windows use menos memória, libere mais recursos do sistema e opere sem erros, o que resulta em um desempenho mais rápido do PC
Repare erros do Windows corrigindo entradas de registro que apontam para arquivos de sistema incorretos. WinSysClean também limpa o registro do Windows removendo entradas obsoletas deixadas pelo software desinstalado, o que melhora muito o desempenho do PC.
WinSysClean inclui funções de ajuste do Windows como; personalizações da área de trabalho, atalhos especiais da área de trabalho do sistema, reparo dos favoritos do Internet Explorer, gráficos do Monitor do sistema (cpu, memória, disco, serviços do Windows e monitor de drivers)
WinSysClean verifica todos os arquivos do Windows e registros do Registro em busca de erros, de drivers a aplicativos, usando análises complexas do Registro do Windows. Erros de driver do Windows ou entradas de registro apontando para drivers ausentes são corrigidos automaticamente pelo WinSysClean.
Windows Server 2012/ Server 2008 R2/ Vista/ 7/ 8/ 8.1/ 10/ 11
18.2 MB
Lifetime, no updates
$19.50
Comentáriosrios do WinSysClean X11 PRO 21.0.0.550
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The best way to make your SSD wear out faster is to use such programs. And SSDs are better used as storage. That only storing and reading, no unnecessary operations.
Leave the maintenance to "maintenance center" from Windows.
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Dino , the page you linked to seems dodgy, why not link directly to youtube?
WARNING the site ahead was reported to spread intrusive software.
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An SSD is not as fragile as some people think. I have a laptop computer with a 120gb SSD that is now 8 years old. The SSD has 21,144 hours on it. I over-provisioned it in the beginning to use only 94% of the capacity. I Trim the SSD on occasion. Definitely NO defrag. I have 2 Linux and 1 Windows operating systems installed. I use the "sleep" function on my main OS. The SSD health according to SMART is still perfect.
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"Your Milage May Vary" readily comes to mind Here, Now.
Can we please have some objecctive assessment of this Software to really assist decision making either way?
CHEERS!
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"Can we please have some objecctive assessment of this Software to really assist decision making either way?"
WinSysClean X11 PRO & similar are fine to try as long as you've got a good, recent, disk / partition image backup that *you know you can restore* to put things back in the rare case it's necessary. [That part about knowing you can restore the backup is pretty important, as I've found several backup app USB sticks that will not work with UEFI & Secure Boot, e.g AOMEI, EaseUS etc.]
If your having a problem with Windows, WinSysClean X11 PRO **may** help -- you may decide it's worth a shot since there's very little you can do besides running a Windows Troubleshooter, which in my experience usually just wastes your time. Windows Is Not self-repairing. Windows version upgrades requiring a reinstall can usually repair Windows & help by clearing away a Lot of clutter, but it's uncertain if Win10 will see any more of those. You can perform a repair reinstall of Windows, though it doesn't seem to clear out as much leftover junk as upgrading. Windows does have a System File Checker tool, but I've never seen it help with Win10/11.
zdnet[.]com/article/the-ultimate-windows-troubleshooting-trick/
windowscentral[.]com/how-use-sfc-scannow-command-fix-problems-windows-10
Most repair attempts & alleged performance boosts rely on WinSysClean X11 PRO cleaning the registry, which generally amounts to clearing known caches & deleting entries with broken links to missing files &/or registry entries that do not exist. Logically that should not ever cause any problems, but software can contain legacy code that checks for & requires certain registry entries that no longer serve any purpose, so deleting them can break stuff. Logically it likewise shouldn't fix anything either -- a broken link shouldn't do anything because it's broken -- but some people report using a registry cleaner fixed their problem. The smaller the registry's physical size, the better, since it has to be read or parsed, but it takes deleting a Huge number of entries to make a real difference, so WinSysClean X11 PRO is *probably* not going to make a big difference in this respect.
WinSysClean X11 PRO can clean up a lot of junk files Windows & your software leave behind. Windows has Disk Cleanup & Storage Sense, which can help, but neither will get everything, & while WinSysClean X11 PRO does a better job, it won't always get everything either. There's just too much junk left behind. While a bunch of files, each taking up 1MB or less won't matter, you can easily accumulate 5-10GB, or more. And that can be a bigger problem than you think, because while you may have plenty of space left on an SSD, performance decreases, sometimes dramatically, if you exceed 50% of its capacity.
Regarding some comments concerning SSDs...
By default Windows will optimize hard disks & SSDs on a schedule -- it's best not to turn that off, as Microsoft has found SSDs need an occasional defrag to keep Windows performing optimally. Otherwise optimizing SSDs will run a TRIM function, supplementing the TRIM that's likely also run by the SSD's firmware automatically.
Most all hard disks / SSDs record some data concerning their status & performance that you can access using something like Crystal Disk Info, a free app that reads data stored in a drive's S.M.A.R.T. registers. What's recorded & how varies by make & model. Pay attention to past & current temperatures, as both conventional hard disks & SSDs can suffer degraded performance etc. if temps get too high. SSDs can have quite a bit of variation in both their design & the components used, and that goes a long way towards determining their theoretical lifespan & warranty duration. Their recorded S.M.A.R.T. data normally includes some indication of remaining *theoretical* life expectancy / remaining warranty, though how that info is reported also varies... where one drive might show a steady decrease in life remaining, another may drop 1% on day one, then stay at 99% for however long, or it may show 100% forever because the SSD's designers never bothered to make that register active. And that does reflect *theoretical* lifespan -- an SSD can fail at 100% or last years after it reaches 1%.
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Cannot install this as I have a previous version 10 & the program wants to uninstall it but can't as it wants a valid copy of the installation package wsc_x10_pro msi...........blocked can't even delete the file now.
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