RegistrySmart one click registry fix 3.42
| Developer: |
micklemuckle.co.uk (more products...) |
| OS: | Win95/98/ME/NT 3.x/NT 4.x/2000/XP/2003/ Vista Starter/ Vista Home Basic/ Vista Home Premium/ Vista Business/ Vista Enterprise/ Vista Ultimate |
| License: | Freeware |
| Price: |
FREE |
| Size: | 2.00 MB |
| Rating: | Rate this program: |
|
|
|
RegistrySmart is the intelligent choice for 1-Click PC error diagnostics and repair. RegistrySmart scans your file system and registry in minutes. All corrupt files, paths, and registry keys are analyzed and automatically repaired so that your PC functions just as when first you purchased it. Why spend countless hours searching the web for instructions on how to resolve PC errors? Don't waste your time.
RegistrySmart eliminates 100% of your PC errors and restore you computer back to it's original performance.
RegistrySmart Repair Features include: Fix Windows-Installer Errors, Repair DLL Files, Windows Startup Errors, Internet Explorer Errors, Runtime Errors, Prevents PC from Freezing or Crashing, Restore Correct File & Registry Paths, Broken DLLs, OCX, and ActiveX Components, Corrupt Files, Stabilize Scripting Errors and Tune & Repair Your PC with Diagnostics.
You need RegistrySmart if your computer has lost stability or your system is slow or you keep receiving error messages or your computer keeps crashing.
You don’t need a new computer and you don’t need a high-priced computer technician. You just need RegistrySmart.
Your windows operating system has what's called a registry. This registry is what Windows uses to store hardware and software configuration information, user preferences and setup information on your computer.
RegistrySmart is a Windows Registry Cleaner, Kernel32 DLL Error Message Fix & Access Violation Repair Software. The RegistrySmart scan will easily find the cause of errors that result in almost all computer problems.
RegistrySmart will save you from reformatting your computer. The RegistrySmart scan will identify errors related to missing startup programs, missing system fonts, invalid shortcuts, missing dll files, invalid application paths, invalid device drivers, missing file associations and missing help files.
There are invalid entries in your registry that can cause problems with the operation of your computer. |
|
|
Latest news:
Information Agenda: A strategy shift from applications to information (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 11:28:14 -0800)
Stuck between business challenges on the one hand, and information management systems on the other hand which simply limit your ability to respond. IBM's Tom Inman wants an easy way to spread your information across the board. Commentary--As the CIO of a flourishing business, you are happy to report...
Python update makes break with past (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 08:40:34 -0800)
Python 3.0 is a major change from the Python 2 series, and the first release that is intentionally backwards-incompatible. Python developers on Wednesday released the final version of Python 3.0, a major reworking of the programming language that is incompatible with the Python 2 series. Python...
The weirdest computing disasters of 2008 (Thu, 04 Dec 2008 05:12:55 -0800)
Roasted laptops, panthers savaging memory sticks and angry fishermen throwing computers overboard top the list of the year's weirdest computing disasters. Roasted laptops, panthers savaging memory sticks and angry fishermen throwing computers overboard top the list of the year's weirdest computing disasters. The top 10...
Roadmap: Open source to take over mainstream IT (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 12:46:14 -0800)
Open source-based IT jobs will grow and the cloud will be ubiquitous, as long as the community takes certain steps, according to a roadmap from the Open World Forum. Within the next 12 years, 40 percent of IT jobs will be related to open source, and open-source-based cloud computing...
Oracle adds data-integrity code to Linux kernel (Wed, 03 Dec 2008 08:00:52 -0800)
The enterprise-software company has collaborated with networking-hardware company Emulex to produce Linux kernel data-integrity code. Oracle has announced that it has contributed data-integrity code to the Linux kernel. The open-source code, which has been accepted into the Linux 2.6.27 kernel, is designed to reduce data corruption...
|
|
|