Cleanup does take out some of the grunt work, but it still requires the
user to do the actual deleting, based on what CU says about what it
found. Initially, it seems it will tell you it's listing stuff that's
safe to delete. Then you find out some of em can be safely chucked, some
are probably ok to kill, and some of em apply to software you're using
and maybe you out to leave em.
Bill Gamble wrote:
> I'd already mentioned Cleanup (see the post to which that was the
> reply), but it doesn't apply here. Using "Cleanup" isn't a "manual"
> process in the that hunting down and deleting preferences with a file
> manager is.
--
/"Thirty-five million deaths leave an empty place at only one family
table." /
(News commentator Eric Severied in a radio essay on the 25th
anniversary of the start of World War Two. 8/31/64)
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