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I'm curious if anyone has had any experience with the SYSTEM MECHANIC 6 software. I've heard from a few sources that it's the reaal deal as far as fixing serious issues on a PC. Is it as good as I am hearing? Does it cause system problems like NORTON SYSTEMWORKS does?

2006-10-12 14:51:50 · 3 answers · asked by Denny M 3 in Computers & Internet Software

3 answers

I have used System Mechanic versions 5 and 6. I found version 5 to be very effective without slowing down my computer. However, I can not say the same about version 6. By default, once installed, it adds several startup programs which slowed down starting Windows. In addition, in the background, it drained a lot of memory and CPU processing power. Personally, I felt it was trying to do too much. Instead, i would recommend you try TuneUp Utilities 2006 which is comparable to System Mechanic. It is incredible easy to use and it doesn't slow down the computer. Its system tuneup, registry cleaner, uninstaller, Windows customizer and file recovery is superior to System Mechanic. Like System Mechanic, it offers a 30 day trial. You will be pleasantly surprised by how well it works. Go to http://www.tune-up.com/products/tuneup-utilities/

2006-10-12 15:12:15 · answer #1 · answered by What the...?!? 6 · 0 0

hi, your question is pertinent yet obscure. Overlooking what you propose by using overall performance i'm going to objective to furnish you as many recommendations as accessible. in terms of equipment factors used (i.e. Does it require a great sort of CPU means or a great sort of RAM?) i've got faith Linux (doggy Linux or Kubuntu) are the suited. i've got run PuppyLinux on machines with 64MB RAM and 400MHz processors at stunning speeds. in the 1GHZ, 254MB RAM Kubuntu is stable or maybe XP (very versatile) however the later is working on minimum. If finding at versatility, XP is by using a ways King. it extremely is a somewhat good platform that's and could in all probability be for some extra years the norm. stability smart, MAC OS X is getting stable comments. Linux is lower back enormously good, and XP is solid additionally. (Vista nonetheless has quirks...here is to hoping SP2 will fix those). It relies upon on what you like and on you very own adventure with diverse application.

2016-10-16 03:28:35 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I tried it and I think it is somewhat useless and very dangerous. It makes certain changes to your system that you cannot tell it is making and when something goes south you won't be able to undo it.

2006-10-12 16:53:01 · answer #3 · answered by sdh0407 5 · 0 0

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