Clean Space 712 by Razvan Serea
Clean Space is a system optimization, privacy, and cleaning tool. With this program, you can free up valuable hard disk space by removing unused files from your system, thereby allowing Windows OS to run faster and more efficiently. The program also cleans traces of your online activities, such as cookie files, and your internet history, even in third-party programs. Clean Space key features: Removes junk files (temporary files, logs, caches, cookies, etc.)
Protects user privacy by deleting activity traces
One-click cleanup functionality
Warns about browser cloud sync risks
Supports cleaning of Microsoft Store apps
Enhanced cleaning for Chrome, Firefox, and other browsers
Uses secure deletion methods (military-grade)
Frequently updated with new features and app support
Customizable cleaning zones and app selection
Provides detailed cleaning reports
Fast scanning and cleanup performance
Compatible with Windows 7, 8/8.1, 10, and 11
Low system resource usage
Priority support available in professional version
Clean Space 712 changelog: New cleanup zones added Expanded cleanup coverage - added new zones for cleanup, with support for more third-party apps.
Enhanced settings options - two new features: 1) Auto-close running apps for smoother performance 2) Customizable browser warning for better control.
Optimized storage performance - updated file system structure reduces disk interactions, improving efficiency for data files.
Various fixes for a smoother experience.
Download: Clean Space 712 | 280 KB (Free, paid upgrade available)
Link: Clean Space Home Page | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
That's why as a general guideline whatever Linux distro you choose, it's best to stick with one that's been around a long time (with a bit more of a name to) since it's less likely they will just end-it out of no where.
apparently Clear Linux OS has been around for a little over 10 years now, which is a while but not quite 'a long time'.
p.s. that's one of the reasons I stick with Linux Mint since it's been around longer than probably a high percentage of others (i.e. Aug 2006, so nearly 19 years now) and probably ain't going away anytime soon and I figure anything based on Debian/Ubuntu (Mint 22 is based on Ubuntu 24.04 LTS and even Mint's alternative LMDE is based on Debian) is probably a wiser all-around choice then others mainly because while there is no exact standard when it comes to desktop Linux PC's, Debian/Ubuntu are probably as close as it gets. I would imagine these probably have the most users without checking(?).
I doubt there are many, only those that will get use out of the extras, what ever they are. I doubt a lot of home users even realise what Gemini is, just think it is a new version of Google Assistant.
I wonder if Google will get rid of assistant and force people to Gemini at some point, I got rid of the Gemini app and changed Google Assistant back to what it was, not that I really use it anyway. I have Alexa as the default, and I don't even use that on my phone much. I prefer doing a normal search using Duck Duck Go
“Intel recently announced layoffs impacting 5,000 employees, while also making a rather somber comment that it is too far behind in the AI race to catch up now.” - That’s ridiculous. Whatever we want to this current AI race, it’s absolutely not artificial intelligence, but it absolutely is not too late to spend a bunch of money to make a couple bucks only to lose it all when this AI craze ends suddenly.
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