After cleaning with the latest version of BleachBit, is there any reason that I should be seeing languages in this directory, that I didn't opt to retain? For example, I am seeing bn, xh, fr and some strange variations of English (e.g., pig-latin, and so forth). Not even sure what two of these are ...
Is there something unusual about this directory, that these subdirectories can't/shouldn't be, removed? I only have a 4GB SSD, so I'd like to free the space, if at all possible and advisable.
I wanted to vacuum my Firefox sqlite databases. However, BleachBit vacuumed the default profile which I do not not use..
How do I set the path to the profile that I want to vacuum (it is not in the default directory or even on my C drive)?
p.s. I am using BleachBit v.0.8.7 and WIN 7 - 64 bit, in case that is relevant
I have a little problem installing the 0.7.1 bonus pack on my brand new Kubuntu 10.10 with KDE 4.5.1.
When trying to install, I get an error message "Can't open file »/var/lib/dpkg/tmp.ci//.svn«: Is a directory"
I've just started using BleachBit and so far I'm very impressed. There were two requirements I had when searching for such a tool: the first was the ability to securely shred files and the other was the ability to add my own folders, files and registry entries to the built-in ones. CleanerML is excellent for defining my own cleaners and is far superior to what I'd previously been using in CyberScrub, which I stopped using some time ago due to my dissatisfaction with several product updates.
I just downloaded and tested Bleachbit V0.8.0 on a Windows 7 Starter 32bit. It seems to be exactly what I was searching for, thanks for that! One drawback, though: The Firefox, which I am using right now to write this message, is not shown as a cleaning option. Could this be due to some configuration I made? The documentation says, not the application will be detected but its cache. Maybe there is none? But that seems unlikely. How could I check what is going on? It's V3.6.8 of Firefox. And it is a German system. Maybe it is a localization issue.