accubas.blogg.se

St thumbnail explorer crack
St thumbnail explorer crack







st thumbnail explorer crack

Update 2: You can also use this registry setting: Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 Select Enabled (don’t make my mistake of choosing “Disabled” - you’re enabling the switching off of Thumbs.db. In the right-hand pane, double-click “Turn off the caching of thumbnails in hidden thumbs.db files”. Navigate through the tree to User Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > then either Windows Explorer (Windows Vista/7) or File Explorer (Windows 8) The Local Group Policy Editor will be launched. Hit Win+R, type gpedit.msc in the Run window and click OK. Update: More detailed instructions from AJ below. So, as long as you don’t have anything below Vista accessing your files, go ahead and enable the setting. I can understand why this is enabled by default (backwards system compatibility), but it does seem strange that Windows 8 keeps the file open for such a long and random time. After finding this thread on Techn et, where I learnt a lot of the above, I enabled the setting “Turn off the caching of thumbnails in hidden thumbs.db files” under > User Configuration > Administrative Templates > Windows Components > File Explorer.Īfter doing this then rebooting, my “Folder In Use” issue seems to have completely cleared. Windows 8 seems to be even worse, in that it still creates the file but then keeps it open for a rather long time. The problem is, Vista and above still create the old Thumbs.db by default! This was also deprecated from Windows Vista and above, replaced by a centralised thumbnail location instead of dropping the Thumbs.db files all over your hard drive. Thumbs.db? It’s been around for ages (since Windows 95!) and is a thumbnail cache file used for Windows Explorer’s thumbnail view. I found that explorer.exe had the thumbs.db file open, even though I hadn’t navigated inside the folder. I ran Process Explorer, moved a few folders until I recreated the error and did a search for the folder that was in use. Someone (thanks Barb) reminded me that Process Explorer was a good way to work out what file was open. I was fed up with this, so thought it was about time to work out what was going on. Eventually I’d try again and after a few tries, it would finally move my folder. I’d get this continually, and quite confident that I didn’t have anything actually open. It’s the normal message saying “Folder In Use – The action can’t be completed because the folder or a file in it is open in another program” Since using Windows 8, I’ve had continual issues when trying to move folders around.









St thumbnail explorer crack