Windows Registry and Registry Cleaner Reviews

Surely you’ve come across your share of registry cleaner reviews in your search for answers in the Internet on how to speed up your Windows PC. If that’s the case, then you already know that in general registry cleaners are good for speeding up your PC and Internet connection. But not many people realize what registry cleaners actually do, or even what the Windows registry is.

            Possibly all the registry cleaner review you can scout out in the Web would be able to tell you how the registry cleaner tools work. They are primarily designed to scan the Windows registry, and detect any entries of information there that are damaged or corrupt (or virtually useless, taking up valuable space in your PC memory), and of course take care of them. That is, delete them and ensure all data found in the registry are proper and actually necessary for the appropriate functioning of your Windows PC as an entire system. With just that much, you can probably tell what the registry is. The Windows registry is the overall archive containing all the information, settings, and preferences of your Operating System (OS) and all the software installed in your PC. Your desktop wallpaper information, data about emails, and even password-related stuff are all packed inside the registry. It’s a centralized database that entails a singular focal point of accessing important data by your Windows OS. In that functionality lays the problem.

            Windows accesses the registry files every time it runs a program, every time it turns on and off, even. With all that accessing, updating, and re-accessing, data in the registry inevitably become damaged or corrupt. Software you decide to uninstall from your PC aren’t really nice enough to delete their registry entries for you, so they stay there useless and adding to the registry ‘bloat.’ Registry cleaner comparison should be the first to tell you: let your registry become ‘bloated’ and erroneous, and sooner or later your PC would be slowing down and in the end your Windows will crash.

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3 April 2010 | News and Society

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