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Windows 7 Weird files on the C drive

Windows 7 Weird files on the C drive

K
kohiplays
Member
155
04-05-2020, 10:52 PM
#1
Hello, welcome to Windows! You just completed a fresh installation and everything seems to be working. I noticed some unusual files on the C drive that weren’t there before, and they have locks on them. You want to remove them and understand why they’re locked? It might be related to the Windows Update System you used—WSUS offline. If you’re setting up Windows as your main OS and moving away from macOS, let me know how I can help further.
K
kohiplays
04-05-2020, 10:52 PM #1

Hello, welcome to Windows! You just completed a fresh installation and everything seems to be working. I noticed some unusual files on the C drive that weren’t there before, and they have locks on them. You want to remove them and understand why they’re locked? It might be related to the Windows Update System you used—WSUS offline. If you’re setting up Windows as your main OS and moving away from macOS, let me know how I can help further.

X
xOtashi
Junior Member
49
04-06-2020, 02:31 AM
#2
Your C drive appears to be functioning correctly. No issues detected. You seem to be in good shape.
X
xOtashi
04-06-2020, 02:31 AM #2

Your C drive appears to be functioning correctly. No issues detected. You seem to be in good shape.

T
tmc00
Member
180
04-11-2020, 08:19 PM
#3
Interesting point. Unfortunately, I don’t have the details, but I’d like to understand too since these situations come up often. On my setup, the files didn’t appear on C, but they were mapped to another drive, which might explain why they show up there instead.
T
tmc00
04-11-2020, 08:19 PM #3

Interesting point. Unfortunately, I don’t have the details, but I’d like to understand too since these situations come up often. On my setup, the files didn’t appear on C, but they were mapped to another drive, which might explain why they show up there instead.

H
Han_Der_Mats
Junior Member
28
04-11-2020, 09:06 PM
#4
These are remnants from updates or Office installations (though I’m not sure). Visual Studio and similar redistributable versions by another name.
H
Han_Der_Mats
04-11-2020, 09:06 PM #4

These are remnants from updates or Office installations (though I’m not sure). Visual Studio and similar redistributable versions by another name.

S
stockchief7
Member
172
04-12-2020, 03:45 AM
#5
They represent the MD5 or SHA1 values of Windows update files. This improves search speed and accuracy since multiple patches with identical names won't share the same hash or HMAC. You can check them via a search engine for md5 sha1. If the files are more than 72 hours old, consider deleting them as they may be safely removed. The Disk Clean-up Wizard typically skips these directories. A 32-character hexadecimal code (letters and numbers) can encode over 2^128 unique values, making storage management complex. Windows updates are saved in specific locations and often moved to the disk with available space before installation. These folders aren't created by Steam.
S
stockchief7
04-12-2020, 03:45 AM #5

They represent the MD5 or SHA1 values of Windows update files. This improves search speed and accuracy since multiple patches with identical names won't share the same hash or HMAC. You can check them via a search engine for md5 sha1. If the files are more than 72 hours old, consider deleting them as they may be safely removed. The Disk Clean-up Wizard typically skips these directories. A 32-character hexadecimal code (letters and numbers) can encode over 2^128 unique values, making storage management complex. Windows updates are saved in specific locations and often moved to the disk with available space before installation. These folders aren't created by Steam.