Consider clearing it out manually (or use the CCleaner mentioned below) occasionally or move the cache from your browser's settings to another drive with more space. Delete your Browser Cache - Whether you use Chrome, IE or Firefox, your browser is saving probably a gig or more of temporary files.I'm sure you'll be surprised and get lots back. If it DOES remove the folder, just "md temp" to get it back fresh and empty. It usually doesn't because almost always some other program has a temp file open and the command can't get remove everything. Next, I do a "dir temp" to see if the folder really got deleted. If it screws up your computer, don't email me. If you feel in over your head, don't do it. If you don't feel comfortable, don't do it. " and type " rd /s temp"ĭo be warned, this command says to TRY to delete the whole folder and everything underneath it. Open up an administrative console, type "cd /d %TEMP%" (without the quotes, of course). I recommend you try to delete the TEMP folder. %TEMP% Files - Even though Disk Cleanup is great, sometimes for whatever reason it doesn't always get stuff out of the TEMP folder.Here I've moved it to my D: drive, opening up space for my smaller C: drive. Change it only if you feel you know what you're doing. From here, go to Performance Settings, then Advanced. Type Windows Key+W, then "Advanced System Settings" and enter. Not a big deal with a 500 gig drive, but a HUGE deal on a 128 gig SSD. Boom, change it manually and I get 7 gigs free. For example, I have 12 gigs of RAM and Windows has allocated a 12 gig "swap file." Interestingly, it's recommending (not sure if that's to me, or to itself) that I have only 5 gigs. It's not bad, and it's not a bug, it's just conservative. Virtual Memory - If you've got 8 or more gigs of RAM, it's likely that Windows has allocated more Virtual Memory as a file on disk than needed.Don't turn it off if you use the feature. From an administrative command prompt, type "powercfg -h off" to get that space back. Plus, I have 12 gigs of RAM, and hibernation uses as much disk space as you have RAM. Disable Hibernate - I have a desktop, and I prefer just three power states, sleeping, on or off.From within the Windows 8.1 mail application, press Ctrl-C, then click Settings, then go to Accounts and under Options for your account change the "Download Email from." option to the last month, or even less. See how mail above uses 514 megs of space? That's because I told it to download all my mail. Set your Windows Store Mail app to only download a month of mail.Note the difference between the screenshot above (run normally) and the one below (after clicking "Cleanup System files." It's found 238 megs of files from Windows Update that aren't needed. When you run Disk Cleanup as admin, as I have below, it is able to cleanup after Windows Update files.This will allow it to find and identify a lot more files for cleanup. Be sure to click the "Clean up system files" option to run Disk Cleanup as Administrator. This app is your main line of defense and lists all kinds of things it can clean up.Now, run "Free up disk space by deleting unnecessary files" which is the Disk Cleanup desktop app.I don't bother with anything under 100 megs. If you click "See my app sizes" you'll go to this screen where you can quickly uninstall apps. It'll also give you a decent idea of how your personal files take up space. You can also empty your recycle bin from here. From here you can see how much space your Windows Store apps take up, as well as pictures, Videos, etc.First "Free up disk space on this PC" which runs full screen as a "modern app.".
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