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Windows / Temp Files



 
 
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  #1  
Old February 16th 06, 05:43 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with basically the
same name (slightly differet). The names start with HP and then have slight
variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to delete.
I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but apparently that doesnt
cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have been having some strange problems
with the computer and clearing this temp directory in the past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith


  #2  
Old February 16th 06, 06:35 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

Yes, it probably is to do with your printer, especially if you use it a
lot. Try deleting them a few at a time.....36,000 files is a lot to
clear at one time. Once you get the folder cleared, check it every day
and clear it.

Heather

"Keith Young" wrote in message
...
Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with basically
the same name (slightly differet). The names start with HP and then
have slight variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to
delete. I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but
apparently that doesnt cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have been
having some strange problems with the computer and clearing this temp
directory in the past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith



  #3  
Old February 16th 06, 06:54 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

Boot to DOS using a Startup floppy and type the following commands at the
A:\ prompt


REN c:\windows\temp c:\windows\old

MD C:\windows\Temp

reboot to Windows, and then delete the C;\Windows\old folder

then check frequently the content of the new Temp folder - when you see one
or two new HPxxxx.xx files there, open one in Notepad, and see what the
contents are
post back, and let us know aht's there, and we may be able to isolate the
cause, and find a cure

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to NG's
"Keith Young" wrote in message
...
Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with basically the
same name (slightly differet). The names start with HP and then have
slight variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to
delete. I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but apparently
that doesnt cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have been having some
strange problems with the computer and clearing this temp directory in the
past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith



  #4  
Old February 16th 06, 09:42 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

Thanks for the DOS commands......I find that whenever I use my printer
or scanner (scanner is worse), I get a ton of temp files. He has
probably never noticed them before and they do not "self-destruct".

Cheers.....Day 9 and still going strong. Had those cravings on Day 8
that you mentioned. Neighbour just phoned (3 hours after he quit) and
he is going nuts!! Wuss!! (G)

Figgs

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
Boot to DOS using a Startup floppy and type the following commands at
the A:\ prompt


REN c:\windows\temp c:\windows\old

MD C:\windows\Temp

reboot to Windows, and then delete the C;\Windows\old folder

then check frequently the content of the new Temp folder - when you
see one or two new HPxxxx.xx files there, open one in Notepad, and see
what the contents are
post back, and let us know aht's there, and we may be able to isolate
the cause, and find a cure

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to
NG's
"Keith Young" wrote in message
...
Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with
basically the same name (slightly differet). The names start with HP
and then have slight variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to
delete. I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but
apparently that doesnt cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have been
having some strange problems with the computer and clearing this temp
directory in the past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith





  #5  
Old February 16th 06, 10:46 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

Hello Noel
This sounds similar to WinXP, but I do not know if the below applies to ME.
There appears to be 2 temps - one gets deleted when you disk cleanup but the
other never does, and manual appears the only way to keep the numbers down.
I had a similar thing with 2000. With that OS, if I tried to delete a few
at a time, they just regenerated as copy1, cop2 etc. At one point I got to
copy 10, and finished up with more than I had started.
Yes, it ran into the thousands of files and dozens of folders.
With XP I do this;
Start - Run - type %temp% - Select edit then 'select all'. Then go to
File - Delete.
Delete will start but will stop when a file is still in use. So click on
delete again until you are left with a dozen or so, then select all but the
latest time/dated ones, and delete them. You should be left with 2, 3 or 4
files, all dated and timed the same.
I do this about once every two weeks.
Hope this is of help - with acknowledgement to Wesley Vogel MVP.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
Boot to DOS using a Startup floppy and type the following commands at the
A:\ prompt


REN c:\windows\temp c:\windows\old

MD C:\windows\Temp

reboot to Windows, and then delete the C;\Windows\old folder

then check frequently the content of the new Temp folder - when you see
one or two new HPxxxx.xx files there, open one in Notepad, and see what
the contents are
post back, and let us know aht's there, and we may be able to isolate the
cause, and find a cure

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to NG's
"Keith Young" wrote in message
...
Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with basically
the same name (slightly differet). The names start with HP and then have
slight variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to
delete. I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but apparently
that doesnt cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have been having some
strange problems with the computer and clearing this temp directory in
the past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith





  #6  
Old February 16th 06, 11:37 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

In WinXP, there are a number of TEMP folders which need to be addressed
(carefully!) - there's one for each user account created, one for the
Administrator account, and a 'reserve' one at c:\Windows\TEMP for the older
program which doesn't understand WinNT structures. IIRC, the same applies to
Win2K - and to Win2K3 server
In WinME you still have the option to boot to a mode in which a DOS system
can see the whole disk - which is not necessarily the case in any Win
NT-based system, as most boot floppies and not capable of reading from or
writing to a NTFS file system. - that said, the limits that apply in FAT32
do not apply in NTFS, so it's unlikely that the system would seize in the
same way - unless the user for some reason had installed the OS into a FAT32
environment.

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to NG's
"antioch" wrote in message
...
Hello Noel
This sounds similar to WinXP, but I do not know if the below applies to
ME.
There appears to be 2 temps - one gets deleted when you disk cleanup but
the other never does, and manual appears the only way to keep the numbers
down.
I had a similar thing with 2000. With that OS, if I tried to delete a few
at a time, they just regenerated as copy1, cop2 etc. At one point I got
to copy 10, and finished up with more than I had started.
Yes, it ran into the thousands of files and dozens of folders.
With XP I do this;
Start - Run - type %temp% - Select edit then 'select all'. Then go to
File - Delete.
Delete will start but will stop when a file is still in use. So click on
delete again until you are left with a dozen or so, then select all but
the latest time/dated ones, and delete them. You should be left with 2, 3
or 4 files, all dated and timed the same.
I do this about once every two weeks.
Hope this is of help - with acknowledgement to Wesley Vogel MVP.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
Boot to DOS using a Startup floppy and type the following commands at the
A:\ prompt


REN c:\windows\temp c:\windows\old

MD C:\windows\Temp

reboot to Windows, and then delete the C;\Windows\old folder

then check frequently the content of the new Temp folder - when you see
one or two new HPxxxx.xx files there, open one in Notepad, and see what
the contents are
post back, and let us know aht's there, and we may be able to isolate the
cause, and find a cure

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to NG's
"Keith Young" wrote in message
...
Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with basically
the same name (slightly differet). The names start with HP and then
have slight variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to
delete. I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but apparently
that doesnt cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have been having some
strange problems with the computer and clearing this temp directory in
the past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith







  #7  
Old February 17th 06, 12:19 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

Hello Noel
Having never had the privilege of using Me, I had a feeling my comments
would be of no use, as I am sure it would have been suggested already.
I wonder if 'Vista' will have the same built-in temp that will grow and
grow, regenerate etc without most users knowing until they have no more disk
space.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
In WinXP, there are a number of TEMP folders which need to be addressed
(carefully!) - there's one for each user account created, one for the
Administrator account, and a 'reserve' one at c:\Windows\TEMP for the
older program which doesn't understand WinNT structures. IIRC, the same
applies to Win2K - and to Win2K3 server
In WinME you still have the option to boot to a mode in which a DOS system
can see the whole disk - which is not necessarily the case in any Win
NT-based system, as most boot floppies and not capable of reading from or
writing to a NTFS file system. - that said, the limits that apply in FAT32
do not apply in NTFS, so it's unlikely that the system would seize in the
same way - unless the user for some reason had installed the OS into a
FAT32 environment.

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to NG's
"antioch" wrote in message
...
Hello Noel
This sounds similar to WinXP, but I do not know if the below applies to
ME.
There appears to be 2 temps - one gets deleted when you disk cleanup but
the other never does, and manual appears the only way to keep the numbers
down.
I had a similar thing with 2000. With that OS, if I tried to delete a
few at a time, they just regenerated as copy1, cop2 etc. At one point I
got to copy 10, and finished up with more than I had started.
Yes, it ran into the thousands of files and dozens of folders.
With XP I do this;
Start - Run - type %temp% - Select edit then 'select all'. Then go to
File - Delete.
Delete will start but will stop when a file is still in use. So click on
delete again until you are left with a dozen or so, then select all but
the latest time/dated ones, and delete them. You should be left with 2,
3 or 4 files, all dated and timed the same.
I do this about once every two weeks.
Hope this is of help - with acknowledgement to Wesley Vogel MVP.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
Boot to DOS using a Startup floppy and type the following commands at
the A:\ prompt


REN c:\windows\temp c:\windows\old

MD C:\windows\Temp

reboot to Windows, and then delete the C;\Windows\old folder

then check frequently the content of the new Temp folder - when you see
one or two new HPxxxx.xx files there, open one in Notepad, and see what
the contents are
post back, and let us know aht's there, and we may be able to isolate
the cause, and find a cure

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to
NG's
"Keith Young" wrote in message
...
Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with basically
the same name (slightly differet). The names start with HP and then
have slight variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to
delete. I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but
apparently that doesnt cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have been
having some strange problems with the computer and clearing this temp
directory in the past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith









  #8  
Old February 17th 06, 12:50 AM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

In 99% of cases the problem lies not with the OS, but with a misbehaving
program - - and most of the rest is due to a user killing a program
improperly, so not allowing it to clean up after itself.
One case in point is a program installation - which may create a few hundred
files in the TEMP folder - if the install fails (or the user kills it
improperly), then the files may be left in the folder. Since Win ME, all
OS's have an option to run a cleanup as part of scheduled maintenance, and
I generally recommend that 'novice' users use that facility. The more
experienced user will generally have found their own favoured way of
cleaning the system

Very rarely, a program will have a bug - or two programs will conflict - in
such a way as to quickly generate thousands of files, in one of three
locations.... the Windows\INF folder, the TEMP folder, or the System Restore
archive.... strangely enough the predominant causes for all three amount
either to user error, or incompetence on the part of Symantec programmers.


--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to NG's
"antioch" wrote in message
...
Hello Noel
Having never had the privilege of using Me, I had a feeling my comments
would be of no use, as I am sure it would have been suggested already.
I wonder if 'Vista' will have the same built-in temp that will grow and
grow, regenerate etc without most users knowing until they have no more
disk space.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
In WinXP, there are a number of TEMP folders which need to be addressed
(carefully!) - there's one for each user account created, one for the
Administrator account, and a 'reserve' one at c:\Windows\TEMP for the
older program which doesn't understand WinNT structures. IIRC, the same
applies to Win2K - and to Win2K3 server
In WinME you still have the option to boot to a mode in which a DOS
system can see the whole disk - which is not necessarily the case in any
Win NT-based system, as most boot floppies and not capable of reading
from or writing to a NTFS file system. - that said, the limits that apply
in FAT32 do not apply in NTFS, so it's unlikely that the system would
seize in the same way - unless the user for some reason had installed the
OS into a FAT32 environment.

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to NG's
"antioch" wrote in message
...
Hello Noel
This sounds similar to WinXP, but I do not know if the below applies to
ME.
There appears to be 2 temps - one gets deleted when you disk cleanup but
the other never does, and manual appears the only way to keep the
numbers down.
I had a similar thing with 2000. With that OS, if I tried to delete a
few at a time, they just regenerated as copy1, cop2 etc. At one point I
got to copy 10, and finished up with more than I had started.
Yes, it ran into the thousands of files and dozens of folders.
With XP I do this;
Start - Run - type %temp% - Select edit then 'select all'. Then go to
File - Delete.
Delete will start but will stop when a file is still in use. So click
on delete again until you are left with a dozen or so, then select all
but the latest time/dated ones, and delete them. You should be left
with 2, 3 or 4 files, all dated and timed the same.
I do this about once every two weeks.
Hope this is of help - with acknowledgement to Wesley Vogel MVP.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
Boot to DOS using a Startup floppy and type the following commands at
the A:\ prompt


REN c:\windows\temp c:\windows\old

MD C:\windows\Temp

reboot to Windows, and then delete the C;\Windows\old folder

then check frequently the content of the new Temp folder - when you see
one or two new HPxxxx.xx files there, open one in Notepad, and see what
the contents are
post back, and let us know aht's there, and we may be able to isolate
the cause, and find a cure

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to
NG's
"Keith Young" wrote in message
...
Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with basically
the same name (slightly differet). The names start with HP and then
have slight variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to
delete. I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but
apparently that doesnt cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have been
having some strange problems with the computer and clearing this temp
directory in the past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith











  #9  
Old February 17th 06, 02:58 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

Hello Noel
I take your points only on the assumption that I have understood what you
mean.
I have had two computers in the last 12 months, both with Winxp Home SP2 and
both have had temp folders that add files etc every time the computer is
switched on.
I can confirm that despite doing a cleanup, this particular temp does not
get cleaned.
Most often when a cleanup is performed, there is nothing in the 'temp' as
shown.
Yet there is plenty in that other one unless I have done a manual cleanout.
I have never had any Symantec/Norton product on either computer.
I am not alone with this phenomenon.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
In 99% of cases the problem lies not with the OS, but with a misbehaving
program - - and most of the rest is due to a user killing a program
improperly, so not allowing it to clean up after itself.
One case in point is a program installation - which may create a few
hundred files in the TEMP folder - if the install fails (or the user kills
it improperly), then the files may be left in the folder. Since Win ME,
all OS's have an option to run a cleanup as part of scheduled
maintenance, and I generally recommend that 'novice' users use that
facility. The more experienced user will generally have found their own
favoured way of cleaning the system

Very rarely, a program will have a bug - or two programs will conflict -
in such a way as to quickly generate thousands of files, in one of three
locations.... the Windows\INF folder, the TEMP folder, or the System
Restore archive.... strangely enough the predominant causes for all three
amount either to user error, or incompetence on the part of Symantec
programmers.


--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to NG's
"antioch" wrote in message
...
Hello Noel
Having never had the privilege of using Me, I had a feeling my comments
would be of no use, as I am sure it would have been suggested already.
I wonder if 'Vista' will have the same built-in temp that will grow and
grow, regenerate etc without most users knowing until they have no more
disk space.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
In WinXP, there are a number of TEMP folders which need to be addressed
(carefully!) - there's one for each user account created, one for the
Administrator account, and a 'reserve' one at c:\Windows\TEMP for the
older program which doesn't understand WinNT structures. IIRC, the same
applies to Win2K - and to Win2K3 server
In WinME you still have the option to boot to a mode in which a DOS
system can see the whole disk - which is not necessarily the case in any
Win NT-based system, as most boot floppies and not capable of reading
from or writing to a NTFS file system. - that said, the limits that
apply in FAT32 do not apply in NTFS, so it's unlikely that the system
would seize in the same way - unless the user for some reason had
installed the OS into a FAT32 environment.

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to
NG's
"antioch" wrote in message
...
Hello Noel
This sounds similar to WinXP, but I do not know if the below applies to
ME.
There appears to be 2 temps - one gets deleted when you disk cleanup
but the other never does, and manual appears the only way to keep the
numbers down.
I had a similar thing with 2000. With that OS, if I tried to delete a
few at a time, they just regenerated as copy1, cop2 etc. At one point
I got to copy 10, and finished up with more than I had started.
Yes, it ran into the thousands of files and dozens of folders.
With XP I do this;
Start - Run - type %temp% - Select edit then 'select all'. Then go to
File - Delete.
Delete will start but will stop when a file is still in use. So click
on delete again until you are left with a dozen or so, then select all
but the latest time/dated ones, and delete them. You should be left
with 2, 3 or 4 files, all dated and timed the same.
I do this about once every two weeks.
Hope this is of help - with acknowledgement to Wesley Vogel MVP.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
Boot to DOS using a Startup floppy and type the following commands at
the A:\ prompt


REN c:\windows\temp c:\windows\old

MD C:\windows\Temp

reboot to Windows, and then delete the C;\Windows\old folder

then check frequently the content of the new Temp folder - when you
see one or two new HPxxxx.xx files there, open one in Notepad, and see
what the contents are
post back, and let us know aht's there, and we may be able to isolate
the cause, and find a cure

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to
NG's
"Keith Young" wrote in message
...
Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with
basically the same name (slightly differet). The names start with HP
and then have slight variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to
delete. I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but
apparently that doesnt cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have been
having some strange problems with the computer and clearing this temp
directory in the past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith













  #10  
Old February 17th 06, 04:14 PM posted to microsoft.public.windowsme.general
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Windows / Temp Files

Many anti-virus products create random-named executables in the TEMP folder
which cannot be cleaned with Windows running - the idea being that a
potential virus then doesn't know the name of the running process that it
has to kill to survive. Some anti-spyware products do the same, IIRC
(RootkitRevealer for one) These files are deleted during a graceful shutdown

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

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"antioch" wrote in message
...
Hello Noel
I take your points only on the assumption that I have understood what you
mean.
I have had two computers in the last 12 months, both with Winxp Home SP2
and both have had temp folders that add files etc every time the computer
is switched on.
I can confirm that despite doing a cleanup, this particular temp does not
get cleaned.
Most often when a cleanup is performed, there is nothing in the 'temp' as
shown.
Yet there is plenty in that other one unless I have done a manual
cleanout.
I have never had any Symantec/Norton product on either computer.
I am not alone with this phenomenon.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
In 99% of cases the problem lies not with the OS, but with a misbehaving
program - - and most of the rest is due to a user killing a program
improperly, so not allowing it to clean up after itself.
One case in point is a program installation - which may create a few
hundred files in the TEMP folder - if the install fails (or the user
kills it improperly), then the files may be left in the folder. Since
Win ME, all OS's have an option to run a cleanup as part of scheduled
maintenance, and I generally recommend that 'novice' users use that
facility. The more experienced user will generally have found their own
favoured way of cleaning the system

Very rarely, a program will have a bug - or two programs will conflict -
in such a way as to quickly generate thousands of files, in one of three
locations.... the Windows\INF folder, the TEMP folder, or the System
Restore archive.... strangely enough the predominant causes for all three
amount either to user error, or incompetence on the part of Symantec
programmers.


--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to NG's
"antioch" wrote in message
...
Hello Noel
Having never had the privilege of using Me, I had a feeling my comments
would be of no use, as I am sure it would have been suggested already.
I wonder if 'Vista' will have the same built-in temp that will grow and
grow, regenerate etc without most users knowing until they have no more
disk space.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
In WinXP, there are a number of TEMP folders which need to be addressed
(carefully!) - there's one for each user account created, one for the
Administrator account, and a 'reserve' one at c:\Windows\TEMP for the
older program which doesn't understand WinNT structures. IIRC, the same
applies to Win2K - and to Win2K3 server
In WinME you still have the option to boot to a mode in which a DOS
system can see the whole disk - which is not necessarily the case in
any Win NT-based system, as most boot floppies and not capable of
reading from or writing to a NTFS file system. - that said, the limits
that apply in FAT32 do not apply in NTFS, so it's unlikely that the
system would seize in the same way - unless the user for some reason
had installed the OS into a FAT32 environment.

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to
NG's
"antioch" wrote in message
...
Hello Noel
This sounds similar to WinXP, but I do not know if the below applies
to ME.
There appears to be 2 temps - one gets deleted when you disk cleanup
but the other never does, and manual appears the only way to keep the
numbers down.
I had a similar thing with 2000. With that OS, if I tried to delete a
few at a time, they just regenerated as copy1, cop2 etc. At one point
I got to copy 10, and finished up with more than I had started.
Yes, it ran into the thousands of files and dozens of folders.
With XP I do this;
Start - Run - type %temp% - Select edit then 'select all'. Then go to
File - Delete.
Delete will start but will stop when a file is still in use. So click
on delete again until you are left with a dozen or so, then select all
but the latest time/dated ones, and delete them. You should be left
with 2, 3 or 4 files, all dated and timed the same.
I do this about once every two weeks.
Hope this is of help - with acknowledgement to Wesley Vogel MVP.
Rgds
Antioch

"Noel Paton" wrote in message
...
Boot to DOS using a Startup floppy and type the following commands at
the A:\ prompt


REN c:\windows\temp c:\windows\old

MD C:\windows\Temp

reboot to Windows, and then delete the C;\Windows\old folder

then check frequently the content of the new Temp folder - when you
see one or two new HPxxxx.xx files there, open one in Notepad, and
see what the contents are
post back, and let us know aht's there, and we may be able to isolate
the cause, and find a cure

--
Noel Paton (MS-MVP 2002-2006, Windows)

Nil Carborundum Illegitemi
http://www.crashfixpc.com/millsrpch.htm

http://tinyurl.com/6oztj

Please read http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm on how to post messages to
NG's
"Keith Young" wrote in message
...
Not sure what is going on but I am trying to clear my windows.temp
directory. The are more than 36,000 files in there all with
basically the same name (slightly differet). The names start with
HP and then have slight variations in the remainder of the name.

My WINME computer locks up when I try and select all of the files to
delete. I tried to clear through the Disk Cleanup utility but
apparently that doesnt cleat the Windows.Temp directory. I have
been having some strange problems with the computer and clearing
this temp directory in the past has helped.

Can this have anything to do with my HP932 printer?

How can I get rid of these files.

Thanks for your help.

Keith















 




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