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README.TXT
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CleanSweep 95 version 2.02 README File
Thank you for purchasing Quarterdeck's CleanSweep 95! This file
includes tips and information to help you get the most out of the
package, a listing of some known problems, and last-minute
corrections that did not make it into the manual. We recommend
that you print this file and keep it with your printed documentation
for future reference.
Table of Contents
Late Changes and Additions
What's New in Version 2.02
Information Specific to Windows NT 3.51
Info and Tips
Known Issues
Contacting Quarterdeck
Late Changes and Additions
- The CleanSweep Install Monitor now has an option to manually start
and stop the logging process. To activate this feature, simply
maximize the Install Monitor program from the Windows 3.1x icon or
the Windows 95 system tray, and then select the "Start Logging"
option. The Install Monitor will ask you to confirm that you want to
start logging changes made to the computer, and then minimize to a
flashing icon. To stop the logging, click on the flashing icon, and
then choose the "Stop Logging" option. Install Monitor will then record
all changes that were made to your system.
What's New in Version 2.02
- CleanSweep now supports Windows 3.1, Windows for Workgroups
3.11, Windows 95, and Windows NT 3.51 Server and Workstation. In
addition, CleanSweep 95 is currently compatible with the Windows NT
Preview Shell and has been tested with early betas of Windows NT 4.0.
- An integrated install routine, which means that there is one set of
install disks for three separate versions of Windows (Windows 3.x,
Windows NT and Windows 95)!
- Improved registry awareness when uninstalling 32bit applications in
Windows NT and Windows 95.
- A new, faster compression engine for backing up, archiving, and
transporting applications and files. This also resolved several issues,
including a situation when backing up to a floppy disk would not complete
properly.
- A more robust Install Monitor which includes support for the AutoPlay
feature of Windows 95 and enhanced automated activation features.
- The Orphan Finder is improved for enhanced accuracy.
- CleanSweep 95 2.02 has enhanced support for 16-bit applications.
- CleanSweep's ability to handle alternate shells has been augmented.
Supported shells include PC Tools 2.0, Sidebar, the Windows NT Preview
Shell, and Norton Navigator for Windows 95.
- There is a new, completely updated Help file for CleanSweep 2.02 for
greater online assistance for our users!
Information Specific to Windows NT 3.51
- The Windows NT version of CleanSweep 95 does not contain a Usage
Monitor or Install Monitor. These monitors will be implemented in a
future release of CleanSweep.
- CleanSweep for NT currently supports the Intel x86 platform only.
- The Windows NT version of CleanSweep 95 does not contain file viewers
since we currently rely on the viewers provided by Windows 95.
Info and Tips
CleanSweep and Slack Space
When CleanSweep displays the amount of disk space that will be saved by
deleting programs or files, it will often note that more disk space will
be saved than the files seem to occupy. This is a result of the scheme
that is used to store files on a disk. A physical hard drive contains
one or more "partitions". Each partition is subdivided into "clusters",
whose size is largely dependent on the size of the partition; sizes of
4K to 32K are common. Each file on your hard drive is stored in one or
more clusters. Regardless of how much of the cluster is used, the whole
cluster is allocated to the file; thus a one-byte file might take 8K of
storage space on your hard drive. A file (or the last portion of it)
rarely fills a cluster exactly; instead, it is common for many clusters
to contain "slack" space - the difference between the size of the cluster
and the amount of space that a file is using. A great deal of space may
be reclaimed from your hard drive by deleting a large number of files,
even if the files themselves are relatively small.
Stacker 4.0 and DoubleSpace 3 contains technology that dramatically reduces
the amount of slack space on your hard drive. CleanSweep's calculations may
not take Stacker's savings into account.
CleanSweep's View Option (Windows 95 and 3.x only)
CleanSweep 95 uses different file viewers for Windows 3.1x and Windows
95. The Windows 3.1 file viewers are included with CleanSweep and
do not require any special Windows configuration.
In Windows 95, CleanSweep's View option support is limited to those
viewers supplied by Windows 95 itself. Some Windows installation options,
including floppy disk distributions of Windows 95, do not install all of
these viewers by default. When you try to view a file for which your Windows
viewer is not yet installed, CleanSweep will notify you and, at your option,
lead you through the process of installing the complete set of Windows
viewers. The following file formats are supported by the Windows 95
QuickView feature:
Ami Pro; ASCII; Bitmaps, Cursors, and Icons; CorelDraw 2.x-5.x;
Micrografx .DRW; Programs (.EXE, .DLL, and .COM); Freelance Graphics for
Windows; Microsoft Multiplan 4.x; Microsoft Word (all versions through
7.0, including DOS and Windows); Microsoft Write; Microsoft PowerPoint;
Quattro and Quattro Pro (for both DOS and Windows); Rich Text Format
(RTF); WordPad; Lotus 1-2-3 1.x-5.x (for both DOS and Windows) Lotus
Symphony 1.0; VP-Planner; Mosaic Twin; Generic WKS format; MS Works
(spreadsheets, database, and word processing for both DOS and Windows);
Windows Meta File (.WMF); Microsoft Word for Macintosh (4.x, 5.x);
WordPerfect 4.x-6.x (for both DOS and Windows); Microsoft Excel 3.x-5.x;
Microsoft Excel Charts 2.x-4.x; and Hex.
Oddly, Windows 95 provides no viewers for .ZIP and other forms of
compressed files, nor for .GIF, .TIF, or .PCX graphics files; nor for
.DBF or other database files.
There is no viewer support in Windows NT, although this is expected to be
improved by the inclusion of the QuickView feature in Windows NT 4.0.
Install Monitor (Windows 95 and Windows 3.x only)
The Install Monitor provides an "append" feature, so that you can
link and log the installation of two programs that might not be
installed at the same time. For example, you might install a database
program, and later install a program to produce specialized reports from
that database. When you monitor the installation of the reporting
program, you might like to use the Append feature so that it's easy to
uninstall both programs together if you wish. You may still use
CleanSweep's standard methods to uninstall one program at a time.
The Install Monitor is very helpful to CleanSweep's Uninstall and Move
functions. In particular, CleanSweep requires the assistance of the
Install Monitor to correctly modify the location of files listed in
the Windows Registry.
Usage Monitor (Windows 95 and Windows 3.x only)
When you start CleanSweep, the Usage Monitor will alert you if
there are files that have been unused for the period of time you specify
in Options / Configure CleanSweep / Usage Monitor / Alert. The File
Usage Monitor icon, in the lower right corner of the screen, will also
flash if you have checked the "Alert if any file is unused for <number>
days" option.
If you change your system's internal clock to a date earlier than the
current date, CleanSweep's File Usage Monitor will not adjust its tables
of files to reflect the change. For example, a file that is listed
as being unused for 10 days will continue to be listed as such even if
you adjust your system's date to some point 10 days in the past.
Conversely, if you switch your system clock to some point in the future,
the number of days that the file has been unused will be increased. There
is no way to reverse this increase.
CleanSweep's File Finders
By default, CleanSweep will search local hard drives with its File
Finders. You may choose to include floppy drives, network drives, or
removable drives in the search. CD-ROM drives may also be included in
the Duplicate File Finder.
Files created during the CleanSweep session will not be displayed
in various CleanSweep Finders until you close CleanSweep and start it
again.
Orphan File Finder
According to CleanSweep, an orphan program in Windows 95 is a program
that is not on the Start menu or one of its submenus. In Windows 3.1 or
Windows NT, an orphan program is a program that is not referenced in the
shell.
If you are using the Orphan Finder with the PC Tools 2.0 multiple desktop
feature, only the programs referenced in the currently active desktop will
be included in CleanSweep's analysis.
View Savings Report
CleanSweep's View Savings Report is intended to give a general overview
of CleanSweep's usefulness, rather than to detail every action on your
hard drive. When you delete a program or file and back it up, CleanSweep
will calculate the space saved as the amount of space taken by the
uninstalled components, minus the size of the backup, and will add this
to the Savings log. However, when you delete the backup, CleanSweep will
not add this figure to the savings log. Similarly, if you choose to
restore the component, CleanSweep will not subtract the original savings
from the savings log. In addition, if you choose to place the backup in a
location other than the default backup folder, the size of the backup will
not be included in the savings log.
If you delete a file from a source drive and back it up to a different
target drive, the log will reflect the savings on the source, and will
not account for size of the backup on the target. (In many cases, the
target will be a floppy drive.)
Known Issues
If you are using the Norton Protected Recycle Bin along with CleanSweep,
and you encounter an error dialog from CleanSweep that reads "Error
creating backup of the selected items. Drive <drive letter> is possibly
full. [Error 16].", empty both the Windows Recycle Bin and the Norton
Protected Recycle Bin, close and restart CleanSweep, and retry the operation.
This is due to the way Norton Utilities protects deleted files.
If using Windows NT with an HPFS volume, you should not place CleanSweep
backups in a directory on the HPFS volume that does not conform to the 8.3
standard naming conventions of DOS (ie. CLNSWEEP.DIR).
CleanSweep's Installation Monitor may have difficulty logging the
installation of the Microsoft Plus Pack and other system-level software
that reboots the machine before the installation process is complete. Such
software does not install itself in the same way that applications do.
We recommend extra care in uninstalling these packages.
If you are installing CleanSweep 95 on a Windows 95 system, and you are
experiencing sluggish performance from the install program, please try
emptying the Norton Protected Recycle Bin. If that does not improve the
performance, restart Windows 95 in Safe Mode and proceed with installation.
When you are asked if you want to restart the machine, allow it to restart
normally.
Windows (95, 3.x and NT) will not permit you to delete files that are
currently in use. Therefore, CleanSweep is unable to delete files that are
in use.
Do not move long file names to a drive (file system) that does not support
long file names.
If you transport a program from a Windows 95 machine to a Windows NT
or Windows 3.1x machine, the Start Menu and Desktop components from
Windows 95 will not be added to the Windows NT or 3.1x shell.
The network decoy feature will not run if a copy of CleanSweep is
already running.
A network decoy created by Windows 95 or Windows NT will not run on
a Windows 3.x machine. In addition, you should not run decoys created in
Windows 3.x on a Windows 95 or Windows NT machine.
Installing CleanSweep to a drive that is not available when Windows 95
loads will cause Install Monitor and Usage Monitor to report an error.
Examples of these devices include Bernoulli drives and some ZIP drives.
Microsoft Office 95 users who have upgraded from Microsoft Office 4.x
will notice that some Word 6.0 objects are listed as Orphaned OLE Objects.
This is not an error. Microsoft's upgrade program simply neglects to remove
these. You can safely remove these orphans with CleanSweep with no ill
effects.
CorelDraw 6 users may notice that CleanSweep 95 flags the Corel
Presents Runtime Player as an Orphaned OLE Object. This turns out to
be a issue with the manner in which Corel 6 makes registry entries, and
cannot be corrected by CleanSweep 95.
If you have problems printing a CleanSweep 95 log or report, you can save
the report to a text file and then print it using your favorite text editor
or word processor. There have been reports of incompatibilities with some
Epson Stylus inkjet printers.
If you have a system that dual-boots between Windows 95 (or Windows NT) and
Windows 3.1, you should run the CleanSweep Install in each environment in
order to use both the 16-bit and 32-bit versions of CleanSweep.
Windows 3.1x has a limit of 8,192 items that can be displayed in a list box.
If you have more than 8,192 files that are to be listed in the Low File Usage
Finder, then only the first 8,192 files will be displayed.
The Low File Usage Finder will list all files in any folder called BACKUP.
This can be a issue with some tape backup software.
Contacting Quarterdeck
Visit the Quarterdeck forum on CompuServe (GO QUARTERDECK), or
Quarterdeck's World Wide Web site (http://www.qdeck.com/). Update news
and patches, if any, will be available there.
Those using more traditional means of communication should contact:
Quarterdeck Corporation
13160 Mindanao Way
Marina del Rey, CA 90292-9705
USA
(310) 309-3700 (Sales)
(310) 309-4250 (Technical Support)