Click
Here
for more articles |
|
|
Should
you care for your Windows registry health? |
by:
Ted
Peterson |
What
are Windows registry? Why are they so important
for your operating system? What can you
do to keep them reliable?
According to Microsoft site, registry are
"a central hierarchical database used in
Microsoft Windows ... to store information
necessary to configure the system for one
or more users, applications and hardware
devices." You can add to that data regarding
file types like what application is used
to open them, what icons should be display
for them and so on.
I will try to explain what's happening on
2 of the most common scenarios that take
place on your computer:
1. You get a new program (software or game).
You want to give it a try, so you install
it. At that point, new data is written in
your windows registry. That data include
program folder, associated files, various
settings that are used by the program, whether
it will run on startup (HKCU/Software/Microsoft/Windows/Current
Version/Run/ ) or only at the first startup
(HKCU/Software/Microsoft/Windows/Current
Version/RunOnce/ ).
No problem so far. But what's happening
if you decide to uninstall it? That's that
point where things get tricky.
Even if you receive a "successfully uninstall"
message, pieces of data remain in your registry.
Of course, this is not happening on all
cases, but sadly it does in many of them.
In a worst case scenario, if for instance
files "*.abc" are registered to an application
that you just removed and the whole registration
process wasn't properly removed from registry,
you will get an error when you try to run
that sort of files. Those invalid registry
entries won't bother you visibly all the
time, but they will cause your computer
to slow down or even crash in some cases.
2. You install some new hardware, like another
network card or something. When you plug
it in, Windows will detect it and install
the best drivers for it. Of course, a significant
quantity of data is written into registry.
Again no problem so far. When you shutdown
you computer and remove the just installed
device, registry entries are not deleted.
They just remain there. If you try, after
a period of time, to install a similar device,
conflicts may appear, because you computer
might confuse them. This is happening because
of the old and possibly corrupt registry
entries.
A solution to avoid those kind of problems
is to create regular backups of your entire
Windows registry. That way you can easily
restore them the moment you feel something
is not working right. But be careful, because
an old backup might cause your newest programs
or hardware devices to malfunction. Another
way to solve the problems is to use a registry
tool that would parse your registry and
fix all invalid, missing or corrupt entries
that it could find.
You can visit CoreDownload, a software archive
with more than 23.000 programs where you
will find a variety of registry tools that
can fix all your problems.
About the author:
Ted Peterson writes for CoreDownload
- Download essential games and utilities.
Purchase online having up to 20%
discount of the initial price for popular
titles like
Registry
Mechanic.
Circulated by Bandoni
Media
|
|