News1 min ago
erasing all unused registry keys
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the title is a little misleading. im sure the registry keys that i want to erase are doing something. they are preventing me from re using old products. imagine i download a free trial of a game that has a 60 minute limit. after the 60 minutes is over i uninstall the game and remove all references from the pc and registry. when i reinstall the game it still says that my limit has been reached. obviously using registry cleaners does not work, i assume that the registry keys in question are in use preventing me from cheating the system. is there anything i can use that will remove all keys like this? i know that reisntalling windows works well but it takes so long saving all of my files to dvds and reinstalling all old apps etc. any ideas?
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Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by boobesque. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I test a lot of beta software so I often want a clean image of Windows to install the beta software.
What I do is take an image of my Windows XP system using a product called Ghost.
I do a clean Windows XP install then use Ghost to create an image on to a second hard drive in my PC.
Then at any point I can re-install Windows XP from this Ghost image in about 5 minutes or less.
It does mean you need a second hard drive, but once you have that it is fairly easy.
What I do is take an image of my Windows XP system using a product called Ghost.
I do a clean Windows XP install then use Ghost to create an image on to a second hard drive in my PC.
Then at any point I can re-install Windows XP from this Ghost image in about 5 minutes or less.
It does mean you need a second hard drive, but once you have that it is fairly easy.
i am currently using both avg and norton. the problem is that avg sometimes allows files through which norton detect and vice versa. i prefer to have both virus programs running to be on the safe side and as symantec is a large company it is duty bound and financialy bound to stay at the cutting edge of the virus detection scene so i feel that keeping norton will benefit me in ways that avg cannot possibly compete with.
having two anti-virus programs on your computer isn't great. they often conflict each other, and it'll probably slow your computer a fair bit too.
Plus my experience of Norton, as well as many others', isn't exactly great. AVG is also a for-profit company, it just has a free version of personal use.
Plus my experience of Norton, as well as many others', isn't exactly great. AVG is also a for-profit company, it just has a free version of personal use.
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