INTERACT FORUM

Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
Advanced search  
Pages: [1]   Go Down

Author Topic: jriver appdata roaming file is getting too big...is it safe to clean out?  (Read 2445 times)

Bengi010

  • World Citizen
  • ***
  • Posts: 173

I'm trying to free up space on my C: drive and noticed that JRiver's appdata roaming file is over 2GB.  Mostly it's the Thumbnails (1GB) and Cache (818MB) folders that seem bloated.  Is it possible to delete or move those files?  I have plenty of room on another drive, and I've directed everything available in the options to save there already.
Logged
Intel Core i-5 6600K, Asus Z170-A ATX Motherboard, Gigabyte GTX 970 4GB, 16 GB Corsair Vengeance Ram, Asus Xonar Essence STX,
                                          Be Quiet Dark Power Pro 10 1000w PSU, Lian-Li PC-B25F ATX Tower,
                                   Dell S2716DG G-Sync Monitor & AOC 2230 Monitor, Corsair Hydro H60 Cooler,
                                                                    Windows 10, JRiver MC 23

Matt

  • Administrator
  • Citizen of the Universe
  • *****
  • Posts: 42376
  • Shoes gone again!

It's fine to delete the cache folder.

If you have old libraries you no longer use, it would be safe to delete the thumbnails.  You could also delete all the thumbnails, and just rebuild the thumbnails in the one library you use.  If you only have one library folder under the thumbnails folder, there isn't any way to make it smaller.
Logged
Matt Ashland, JRiver Media Center

astromo

  • MC Beta Team
  • Citizen of the Universe
  • *****
  • Posts: 2251

In addition to Matt's input, this is my take on things -

Step 1 - The font of all spurious knowledge, i.e. Wikipedia:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thumbs.db


Step 2 - Some other relevant links:
http://www.technoskillonline.com/2010/03/trick-to-remove-thumbs-db-file-in-your-computer/
http://pctechnotes.com/how-to-disable-and-remove-thumbs-db/

From (faded?) memory, I got hacked off with being stopped by Windows from using the safe eject USB function. I searched the web for an answer and I got similar info to that above. My system is now free of Thumbs.db and life is simpler and as a result, less stressed when doing simple functions.

From the sounds of Matt's comments I don't think that disabling this caching function is setting myself up for major dramas. I figure there's enough power in the PC to deal with a bit of CPU crunching to re-render image files within Explorer if required. It's useful to know that as far as MC is concerned, these Thumbs.db files are superfluous.
Logged
MC33, Win10 x64, HD-Plex H5 Gen2 Case, HD-Plex 400W Hi-Fi DC-ATX / AC-DC PSU, Gigabyte Z370 ULTRA Gaming 2.0 MoBo, Intel Core i7 8700 CPU, 4x8GB GSkill DDR4 RAM, Schiit Modi Multibit DAC, Freya Pre, Nelson Pass Aleph J DIY Clone, Ascension Timberwolf 8893BSRTL Speakers, BJC 5T00UP cables, DVB-T Tuner HDHR5-4DT
Pages: [1]   Go Up