Can I Delete Windows Error Reports
Contents |
be down. Please try the request again. Your cache administrator is webmaster. Generated Wed, 05 Oct 2016 20:33:37 GMT by s_hv997 (squid/3.5.20)
suggested from my Windows OS itself and now in the list of things to cleanup I get the “Per user archived Windows Error reports”, “System archived Windows Error Reports” etc. Is that OK to delete all these from windows error reporting server 2012 my system? as it also consumes some space in my system? Can you please windows vista error reporting advice me in this? Reply With Quote Related Windows Problems:Unable to delete a Folder in windows 7How to delete a file in windows 7 error reporting my Windows PC when it says itÂ’s used by another service or program? Is it possible to force delete those files as of Linux where we use “rm” command?Unable to delete user account on Windows XPEasiest http://answers.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/forum/windows_vista-performance/should-i-delete-per-user-queued-windows-error/086f6ff3-66ac-4a1c-8a15-034cdbbad556 way of disabling error reporting on Windows XP?Getting Windows Boot Manager Error 0xc000000f while starting up Windows VistaCannot delete folders from Windows VistaWindows Vista System cannot delete movies in Windows Media Player 10Unable to delete Qoobox folder from the C drive of the Windows systemError access denied when trying to delete a file from Program Data in Windows 7"Error: Unable to delete the document, using in Print Queue" on Windows 7 15-04-201311:33 PM http://windowsdiscussions.com/can-i-delete-system-error-reports-windows-115119.html #2 solution Array Join Date Sep 2012 Location MNCL Posts 260 Re: Can I delete the System error reports in Windows? DEAR FRIEND, To delete the System error reports ....follow the below guide lines click start menu button and go to my computer then right click on C: drive and choose properties option and after tap on General tab then click the Disk cleanup button .....after that a window will be displayed In that window select windows error reports option and click Ok In the next step click Delete button Thank you!!!!!!!!! Reply With Quote 17-04-201306:33 AM #3 development Array Join Date Nov 2012 Posts 605 Re: Can I delete the System error reports in Windows? Hello Dear Friend ... Right click on " My Computer " go to the " properties " Go to the " Advanced Properties " After this click on " Error Reporting " Select " Disable Error Reporting " Click DONE Click OK ALL THE GOOD LUCK Reply With Quote 17-04-201307:35 AM #4 VinodKKumar Array Join Date Apr 2013 Posts 380 Re: Can I delete the System error reports in Windows? Dear friend, Yes, you can delete them. It is safe as these are used by your PC only to send report to different application and programs Support Centre for problem
Start here for a quick overview of the site Help Center Detailed answers to any questions you might have Meta Discuss the workings and policies of this site About Us Learn more about Stack Overflow the company http://serverfault.com/questions/21777/archived-and-queued-windows-error-reporting Business Learn more about hiring developers or posting ads with us Server Fault Questions Tags http://maximumpcguides.com/windows-7/free-up-disk-space-in-windows-7-with-disk-cleanup/ Users Badges Unanswered Ask Question _ Server Fault is a question and answer site for system and network administrators. Join them; it only takes a minute: Sign up Here's how it works: Anybody can ask a question Anybody can answer The best answers are voted up and rise to the top Archived and queued Windows Error Reporting up vote 8 down error reporting vote favorite 2 Just ran Disk Cleanup on a computer here (Windows Vista), and saw 3 items in the list I haven't seen before: Per user archived Windows Error Repo... | 402 MB System archived WIndows Error Repor... | 18,0 KB System queued Windows Error Reporti... | 533 MB What are those? I assume it is safe to delete, but should I do something with it first? Should I for example be kind to Mircosoft windows error reporting and send all that queued stuff? How would I do that? Note: Wish I knew what was after those dots. Assume it is "Reporting", but no idea if there is more after it. Hate dialogs that can not be resized... (or at least lets me know what is behind truncated text in a tooltip) windows windows-vista cleanup share|improve this question asked Jun 8 '09 at 9:08 Svish 1,65092539 add a comment| 2 Answers 2 active oldest votes up vote 7 down vote accepted Yes it is safe to delete these files, they are files generated by Windows Error Reporting when an application error occurs. The per-user data is saved to: %USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\wer the system data is saved to: %ALLUSERSPROFILE%\Microsoft\Windows\WER\ THose two folders are split into ReportArchive which is historical reports, and ReportQueue which are reports that have not been sent yet. This applies to both Windows Vista and Windows 7. share|improve this answer answered Jun 8 '09 at 9:28 Richard Slater 2,81322242 Are they used for anything? Can I use them for anything? Can I somehow tell Windows to send the reports that have not been sent yet? –Svish Jun 8 '09 at 11:27 2 windows retains information about how, what, why and when an application or driver has crashed. Depending on the configuration, found in (Vista: Control Panel > System and Mai
with Disk Cleanup in Windows 7. As Windows 7 is used it collects lots of files that are not needed like deleted files, web pages, setup logs, temporary files, and all kinds of other stuff. If your computer's hard drive is running out of space, or you want to keep your computer as uncluttered as possible, Disk Cleanup is a great tool in Windows 7 that will quickly an easily remove all the junk for you. Start Disk Cleanup To open Disk Cleanup, click the Start Orb. Click All Programs. Accessories. System Tools. Click Disk Cleanup. Select which drive you want to clean up (usually C:, but if you have more than one drive you can clean those up as well) and then click OK. Now that Disk Cleanup is running, I'll show you how to use it. How to Use Disk Cleanup So Disk Cleanup is running. Now what? Let's see what all of these check boxes mean. At the top of the Disk Cleanup window it will tell you "You can use Disk Cleanup to free up to X MB of disk space on C:". If you were to check off everything in the Files to delete section you would free up X MBs of hard drive space. Before you check off everything and go on a deleting spree, it helps to know what you're deleting. Note: Not all categories shown below will appear on your computer. This is an exhaustive list of what might appear. Temporary Setup Files: Created by a program when it was being installed. These files are no longer needed and can be removed. Downloaded Program Files: ActiveX controls and Java applets downloaded automatically from website you've visited. Temporary Internet Files: Visited web pages that are stored on the hard drive (called caching). These files are re-used the next time you visit a cached web page making the Internet seem faster. Offline Webpages: Very similar to Temporary Internet Files but Offline Webpages are entire web pages that are deliberately saved on the hard drive for "offline" browsing. Debug Dump Files: Left by Windows after a crash to help fix the problem that caused the crash. Old Chkdsk Files: Saved lost file fragments by the chkdsk tool. These files can be removed. Previous Windows Installation(s): Files from a previous Windows installation. These files are left after you've upg