I love Aulogics Anything, Their Defragger is the fastest for sure, BoostSpeed is awesome as well.
AusLogic Registry Cleaner
CNET wrote:Auslogics Registry Cleaner is a good choice for home users who have some familiarity with the Windows Registry. This no-nonsense application performs quickly and reliably, with good backup and restore features combined with user guidance.
Registry Cleaner looks for errors such as missing files or devices and invalid entries in categories like as Add/Remove Programs, Fonts, Shortcuts, and Virtual Devices. The application, which presents a wizard-like approach, defaults to the recommended quick registry scan option. This will scan six problem areas. Advanced users can choose from 10 additional categories, such as Classes & Active X Objects and Software. Scanning is quick--a couple of minutes for a registry of 80,000-plus keys--and fixing is even faster. You can view the details of all the proposed changes and uncheck specific ones you don't want made.
As one would hope, Auslogics provides both informational and functional tools to minimize the risk of seriously damaging your registry. When setting up an advanced scan, you can click on each category to read a brief description of what problem the program will be seeking. For example, the program allows you to back up and restore your registry easily, and you can choose how many backups to keep and how long you want them stored. In the Program Settings menu item, you can also identify keys that you want the program to ignore.
At first we were frustrated by a seeming lack of usability features, such as a toggle for selecting or deselecting all check boxes. We eventually discovered that these features are handled through right-click menus. One problem without a fix, however, is the optional report you can view at the end of a clean. All reports are saved with the same filename, so viewing a new one will overwrite the old. Remember to save out these files if reports are important to you, because although you can view the details of past cleans through the program interface, this will be limited to data in a list box that you cannot easily send to someone else.
Although Registry Cleaner appears to work perfectly well, fixing 1,185 problems provided a performance gain of only 2 percent, according to the application. As Auslogics will tell you via in-application ads, you will not maximize your housekeeping gains unless you defrag your registry as well. Luckily, Auslogics provides this service as another free download, or you can purchase the BoostSpeed suite, which contains a number of other optimization tools. (To the company's credit, the free version of Registry Cleaner provides all the functionality of the component found in BoostSpeed.)
Anyone looking for a fast and reliable Registry Cleaner should absolutely try Auslogics Registry Cleaner, but be prepared to download additional optimization tools to realize performance gains fully.
AusLogic Disk Defragger
CNET wrote:Join your hard drive fragments together into a tight bunch with this freeware. Auslogics Disk Defrag's interface couldn't be any cleaner or easier to use.
Choose a hard drive from an easy-to-read pull-down menu, and Disk Defrag instantly displays the drive's size, and used and free space. The program even displays a pie graph for visual learners. One click starts the defragmentation process. The program's defrag process screen displays another handy visual. A sector map makes it easy to see how much of the drive is fragmented, allocated, or free. As the program churns away, the defragged sectors are displayed in blue.
We found the program fast, even on older XP systems. A handy HTML report is prepared after each defrag session. A summary displays the total files and folders defragged, while the detail section lists the defrag outcome for each file. We only wish a final sector map was included in the report. Novices to system administrators will love this easy-to-use hard drive defrag program.
AusLogic Registry Defragger
CNET wrote:It's hard to tell if registry defraggers and cleaners work, but the Auslogics Registry Defragger looks good. It's hard to gauge if these programs are effective because once you're done using them, you'd need more than a mere store-bought machine with store-loaded programs to judge CPU speed.
When you run it, it tells you that it will perform a registry analysis, after which you will be able to review its registry report, and once that's done with you can run the registry optimization, requiring a reboot to defrag and compact the registry. It's a fairly serious program, and once you begin the analysis it won't let you move the mouse outside the program window. It also "strongly recommends" that users close all other programs while it runs, although this is a standard warning for registry-cleaning apps.
An expected change in clock speed or other performance benchmarks never materialized. Resource-intensive Internet browsers and e-mail clients may be piggish, but they're necessary and don't load any faster or slower than normal after running the reg defrag. Until a registry defragger or cleaner can demonstrate benchmarkable improvements to a computer, they'll be little more than 21st century snake oil.
AusLogic BoostSpeed
CNET wrote:BoostSpeed is an effective all-encompassing utility suite, combining some of Auslogics' popular freeware titles such as Disk Defrag and Registry Defrag with services that they don't offer elsewhere. There's an uninstall manager, a startup manager for boot cycle customizations, RAM and browser optimizers, file shredder, DirectX diagnostic, Windows tweak manager, and several mini apps to manage Windows settings. It also comes with a rescue center that can back up any settings before you change them. No doubt, BoostSpeed gives you your money's worth, at least in terms of services provided. Upgrading also only costs $10, for those who own older versions.
Are they all worth paying for? That depends on what kind of user you are. Most, if not all, of these features are available as freeware from one vendor or another, and generally one in each category is top-notch or nearly so. Some of the lesser tools, like the tweaks manager and the security feature, didn't live up to our expectations. Tweaks focused on basic functions and wouldn't serve as a replacement for TweakUI, while the security feature merely let me know that we had up-to-date security apps installed. Still, the convenience of having all these tools located under one umbrella was hard to argue with, and even the tools that didn't impress did their jobs hitch-free.
Scan speeds for the features new to us included here were comparable with those in Disk Defrag. Users also got the convenience of optionally setting the program to run at startup and live in the system tray, making most of the program's functionality no more than a context-menu click away. The most useful tools are the Disk Defrag, the RAM optimizer, the Registry Optimizer--if you believe that "optimizing" the Registry is more than snake oil--the file shredder, and the performance monitor. The 15-day trial comes unfettered, allowing you to thoroughly judge if this is a program you want.
AusLogic Emergency Recovery
Auslogic wrote:Restore accidentally deleted files, documents, or images with Emergency Recovery. Don't let months or years of your work disappear with deleted documents, pictures, and other important files. Files deleted from PC, digital camera or memory stick can be restored with high speed and reliability. Files damaged by computer viruses, spyware, or application programs can also be restored.
AusLogic System Information
CNET wrote:Auslogics System Information launches a very clean, very user-friendly interface that offers simple navigation among its categories of system diagnostics. Its tools are arranged according to System, Devices, and Other, covering programs and engines, networks, and device manager. This free utility provides no visual distractions from the info it displays, and any level of user will appreciate the detail it offers from its scans.
In our tests, the app functioned very well, responding quickly with a full spectrum of info about our system. We liked that it broke down system data according to Windows details, user details, system environment, and the various system folders that keep our PC running. We also liked that we could create and save a comprehensive report of our system data in plain text, HTML, or XML.
Great Stuff Auslogics Rock, IMHO
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