![]() While these familiar functions were predictably underwhelming, TuneUp does have a few distinctive and useful tricks up its sleeve. ![]() Repairing them didn’t harm the system, but didn’t do it much good either, shaving just one second off our boot time and knocking less than 10MB off our RAM usage. TuneUp also includes the obligatory registry cleaner: we set it to work on our test system, using the same OS image as we used to test Norton Utilities, and it claimed to find a remarkable 1,788 errors. There’s no direct equivalent to Norton’s Service Manager, though the vaguely-named Speed Optimiser does suggest some services that can be disabled based on your computer’s role. ![]() And though it tries to helpfully identify which items can safely be removed, you can’t blindly rely on its judgment: we were alarmed to see it mark our backup service as ‘optional’. As usual, the disk defragmenter offers no material advantage over the standard Windows utility, while the startup manager predictably scans only the most obvious locations, ignoring insidious items like browser helpers. ![]() Sadly, the main optimisation modules are a disappointment. ![]()
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