Advanced SystemCare Free 5 uses its powerful arsenal of optimization
tools to keep your PC feeling fresh and clean. It also includes a couple
of features that could help boost performance for either gaming or work
purposes--your choice.
Advanced SystemCare's Quick Care option includes the ability to clean
your registry, perform a rudimentary malware scan, fix and remove broken
shortcuts, delete junk files, and erase browsing tracks. It works in a
flash, requires almost no user input, and to make things even easier,
can be configured to run on system startup.
The Deep Care option, on the other hand, takes system care to another
level. It performs all of the Quick Care items to a much deeper degree,
plus it adds several other scans and fixes to its checklist, including
disk defragmenting, a Windows vulnerability fix, and a system
optimization with several presets. Understandably, this kind of deep
digging can sometimes make a user nervous. Fortunately, the program's
log records all of its activities, letting you see how each affects your
computer.
Scan times for the Quick Care and Deep Care options differ
significantly, yet, both processes still seem blazingly fast. For
instance, we completed a Deep Care scan in approximately 15 minutes,
which is an impressively short time for a system-invasive program like
this.
Brand-new to version 5 is the Active Boost function, which runs in the
background and automatically improves PC performance by managing your
system resources. We recommend enabling it, as it even keeps a log of
all the active processes that it manages to speed up. Also important,
Version 5 connects to the cloud in order to keep its database up to
date.
As for Advanced SystemCare's user interface, we were impressed, to say
the least. The main dashboard is superclean, with nifty icons and
intuitive navigation. Plus, there's an unimposing smiley face always at
the bottom of the screen, indicating your PC's overall health. If you
click the Status button next to the smiley, you can also get more
detailed info from the system performance monitor.
One part of the program we recommend new users approach with extreme
caution is the Turbo Boost, which can be set to optimize for either
gaming or work purposes. It sounds fun, but you must first configure the
tool by telling it which core system services to disable in order to
accelerate your computer's performance. Since the Turbo Boost section
doesn't spell out how disabling these services might affect your
computer, we highly recommend doing your research before exploring. To
its credit, though, Advanced SystemCare can create rescue points, so
it's not hard to undo changes if you end up making any mistakes.
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