I have long had a line in my tempzap. This is how I dealt with it. I deleted all the files within the Prefetch Folder, then emptied the Recycle Bin. Right click on EnablePrefetcher and from the menu choose Modify. Change the Call for Attributes from 3 to 2 click OK. Exit the registry and restart your computer. TonyT ,. I keep forgetting that you can deal with it that way through Services.
I guess I just love tinkering with the registry. Christer ,. Hi Christer, Same here, and I notice mine are all. Is that true on yours as well? Hi Charles! One entry puzzles me: xpsp3. Looked at a Pro system today and has mostly. So for FWIW, this is not a huge file hog - 4.
Hi Guys Hi Kent, Ok, you're another one that has a prefetch that looks about the same as Christer's and mine, and, as far as I can tell is not a big problem.
This article, Use XP's Prefetch feature to improve system performance may not help lturknett but is interesting! I have never had a single file in that Prefetch folder.
Windows saves this information as a number of small files in the prefetch folder. The next time you turn on your computer, Windows refers to these files to help speed the start process. The prefetch folder is a subfolder of the Windows system folder. The prefetch folder is self-maintaining, and there's no need to delete it or empty its contents. If you empty the folder, Windows and your programs will take longer to open the next time you turn on your computer.
Two reasons: 1. Windows maintains a maximum of entries in the Prefetch folder. It cleans itself automatically. The entire performance of your system will slow down. These files can be used to extract timestamp and other resources consumed when the file executes. This Path is encrypted with different types of Hashing Functions. On reaching the limit it automatically deletes from the folder.
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