Any ideas...?¿?

Greg39 wrote:Kingy,
It depends really..... Is it just running for ages (Hard disk LED flashing away) or is it just locked/frozen and needs rebooting, or is it just sat there happily with no disk LED flashing and no lockups? Might be worth checking the system audit log from the administrator tools (Start > program files > admin tools > event viewer). This may give an insight into any error are being encountered when the utility is run.
I'm assuming you never get the results window back showing which files are candidates for removal? Might also be worth running the disk error-checking utility in case it is encountering an unreadable area of disk (right click on the C drive from within "my computer" then select the tools tab and from there the disk error checking util.

Greg39 wrote:Ok, check admin tools is enabled (start >settings >Taskbar& start menu..should get a tick list of selected options, check "Display admin tools" is ticked (I'm assuming it might not be given you cannot find it).....
Also, it would seem I missed a step on the C drive checking ...from right clicking on the C drive, then left click properties (bottom of context menu that appears) then you get awindow containing the tabs of which tools is one.... sorry....memory not what it was.

Greg39 wrote:In terms of what to look for in the system audit log, look for red crosses or yellow exclamation marks on the left hand side. The others should be standard informational messages about process started and quitting, and occasionally stalling!
So assuming no other applications are running (shut them down if they are), I would suggest a system restart/reboot and do nothing other than run the disk cleanup. If it still says exclusive access not granted, then I would suggest rebooting into safe mode (I think it is F8 during the restart when the BIOS announcements (those intital message about the BIOS name, memory size etc etc appear on screen), before the Windows 200 splash screen appears.
http://kb.iu.edu/data/aire.html (how to boot into safe mode link)
then once up and running, login and run disk cleanup..
After this completes, reboot / restart as normal.
If this doesn't do it, I assume you are a user with admin rights etc otherwise you wouldn't have been able to run it previously???

kinghelfer wrote:Greg39 wrote:In terms of what to look for in the system audit log, look for red crosses or yellow exclamation marks on the left hand side. The others should be standard informational messages about process started and quitting, and occasionally stalling!
So assuming no other applications are running (shut them down if they are), I would suggest a system restart/reboot and do nothing other than run the disk cleanup. If it still says exclusive access not granted, then I would suggest rebooting into safe mode (I think it is F8 during the restart when the BIOS announcements (those intital message about the BIOS name, memory size etc etc appear on screen), before the Windows 200 splash screen appears.
http://kb.iu.edu/data/aire.html (how to boot into safe mode link)
then once up and running, login and run disk cleanup..
After this completes, reboot / restart as normal.
If this doesn't do it, I assume you are a user with admin rights etc otherwise you wouldn't have been able to run it previously???
...i take it you include internet explorer in all application?¿? i,m going to close everything and try the disc clean up, then if nothing ,try to start in safe mode...i dont think for one minute i have admin rights to anything here......thanks btw.....
Greg39 wrote:kinghelfer wrote:Greg39 wrote:In terms of what to look for in the system audit log, look for red crosses or yellow exclamation marks on the left hand side. The others should be standard informational messages about process started and quitting, and occasionally stalling!
So assuming no other applications are running (shut them down if they are), I would suggest a system restart/reboot and do nothing other than run the disk cleanup. If it still says exclusive access not granted, then I would suggest rebooting into safe mode (I think it is F8 during the restart when the BIOS announcements (those intital message about the BIOS name, memory size etc etc appear on screen), before the Windows 200 splash screen appears.
http://kb.iu.edu/data/aire.html (how to boot into safe mode link)
then once up and running, login and run disk cleanup..
After this completes, reboot / restart as normal.
If this doesn't do it, I assume you are a user with admin rights etc otherwise you wouldn't have been able to run it previously???
...i take it you include internet explorer in all application?¿? i,m going to close everything and try the disc clean up, then if nothing ,try to start in safe mode...i dont think for one minute i have admin rights to anything here......thanks btw.....
Hi Kingy,
Yes IE sure is an application (a computer program/software in other words)...sounds like a good, plan. Let me know how it goes.

Greg39 wrote:hmmmm....
If CG has a separate login on the system it may be worth using that one and seeing if that works.
To my mind it's either a permissions issue (Admin rights to run the utility), a corrupt user profile (try another user / create another user) something active on the drive not allowing the ultity to run uniterrupted or a physical drive problem.......
http://support.microsoft.com/?id=812248 or is this similar?
Other thoughts would include any hardware or software changes since it last run successfully?

Greg39 wrote:Hi Kingy,
I totally understand what you're saying, but so long as you follow the steps to backup the registry first, you will always be able to restore it back to how it was before you started. The problem comes when people fiddle with the registry and they don't understand what they are doing. So long as you stick to the "destructions", I'm sure you'd be fine. If it would help, I could PM my msn to you and "talk" you through any aspects as you do it?
Alternatively, I could dig out a freeware registry cleaner that *may* solve that particular problem.... Let me know if that would be of interest. It's a simple Graphical point and click system with no need to edit the registry by handBut it may not pick up on the error and therefore may not fix it.
Greg


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