Program Files and Program Files(86) question


  1. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #1

    Program Files and Program Files(86) question


    Hi

    Ive read that windows automatically suggests file install
    locations for 32bit progs into program files(86)
    and 64bit progs are installed into program files.

    Sorry if this is a dumb question, but whenever I install
    any progs I always choose my own file location, i never actually
    install anything into program files, but choose another hard drive
    entirely, this is just my method of managing the progs i install,
    so they dont fill the c drive.

    Does this matter ? or are the files that are installed there merely
    system files that I have no control over anyway ?

    thanks
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 5,795
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
       #2

    Personally, I would never install anything outside of those directories. You may find some older utilities don't work well because of references to them. Either way, I prefer to leave defaults where they should be. If your C drive is that low on space, you should work on fixing that isue first, as that could cause some major problems down the road.

    AS for causing issues with what you are doing...I guess as long as the apps run after install and don't complain...you should be fine. If you are doing this to avoid reinstalling them down the road after a clean install...it isn't going to work, thanks to Window's reliance on the registry.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Thanks for the reply.

    My c drive isnt low, i purposely dont install anything onto it.
    I have a partition for Applications, one for games and another
    for Data such as mp3s and photos.

    Its something Ive always done with previous versions of windows
    and its never been an issue.

    So the C drive becomes the system drive where only OS files
    are stored. The c drive is normally the first drive to become
    fragmented, or the first target for viruses, because I keep it
    small, its quick to scan with a virus prog and defrag.

    Because I keep it lean and dont fill that drive with everything
    I install, this ensures that it always runs as quickly as possible.

    I will contine this practice and if I come a cropper then i guess
    ill have to change my thinking, thanks for the info tho :)
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 5,795
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
       #4

    cerveau said:
    Because I keep it lean and dont fill that drive with everything
    I install, this ensures that it always runs as quickly as possible.
    I figured you'd be going on some misinformation. This is becoming a common theme on here...where people over think and over tweak their config and methods, all for no gain.

    You would have to fill a drive to below 20% free space or so before you'd notice any performance hit. Even then, it is debatable. As for defragging, I don't know if you've ever setup a system the normal, accepted, tried and true way, but you don't get your drive to fragment much with normal use. Windows 7 also auto-defrags for you, which renders your thinking outdated.

    Calling the C drive a target for viruses makes no sense, because if your system were to be infected...it would have no affect on your apps based on where they are installed.

    It is your system, so do with it as you please, but your viewpoints are based on false information and misinformation. Considering most apps would also need to be reinstalled anyway, thanks to the registry, there is absolutely no reason to install them elsewhere, unless you are using a 30 GB SSD. You aren't gaining anything in performance or efficiency.

    There's a saying on many other forums boards for threads like this. "Just because you can....doesn't mean you should". Far too often people come up with these wild configs, claiming that they provide some benefit...when they really don't. Kind of like the threads where people claim that disabling unused services will boost performance.

    I go by the concept of K.I.S.S. Keep It Simple Stupid. Unless there's a tangible, real reason to do something different...I don't. Windows 7's best tweak is to leave it alone.

    Please don't take this as me bashing or ridiculing you. The thread starters are usually the victims in these cases....victims of someone else giving them some really poor advice.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #5

    Well thanks for the advice - again :)

    Interesting view, I assumed by keeping my data separate
    from windows files, I was keeping things simple, ie simple
    for me.

    Just the other day, because of the file structure I use, enabled me
    to quickly pinpoint a problem and eliminate it. I downloaded
    and installed a free online game, a couple of days later
    I saw that my internet connection was being used for something,
    I tracked it down to a file sharing app that had been installed on
    the c drive by the game installer, even thoug I had installed the actual game to a whole different partition. the game company were using my connection file share their game client. I was able to find this
    app in minutes because I was able to scan the c drive quickly
    and was able to identify the prog, If I had installed it, i wouldnt
    have put it on the c drive, which made it obvious to me that I hadnt put it there.

    Going back to my question, when an app is installed, am i correct
    in thinking that IF its a 32bit app, then any system files required
    by it would be installed in the x86 folder ?

    cheers
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 5,642
    Windows 10 Pro (x64)
       #6

    cerveau said:
    Going back to my question, when an app is installed, am i correct
    in thinking that IF its a 32bit app, then any system files required
    by it would be installed in the x86 folder ?

    cheers
    It does not. Its merely for organization.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 5,795
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
       #7

    cerveau said:
    Just the other day, because of the file structure I use, enabled me to quickly pinpoint a problem and eliminate it.
    You would have been able to find the app regardless. What you are detailing is known as the placebo effect. The mere fact that something was installed to C proves my point from above that there's no reason to separate out the apps. What if this was a legit helper app, like the Microsoft .Net, C++, VS, etc? Do you really want apps being installed in two separate drive and two separate places? That alone defeats the point of "simpler and better organized". Any normal power user knows exactly what's installed on their system, and how to identify something that wasn't planned. That's the very basis of fighting malware. Like I said, do what you want, considering it is your own system. Just be aware that it's been debating long ago, and ever point for moving the apps is quickly debunked as misinformation.
    cerveau said:
    Going back to my question, when an app is installed, am i correct in thinking that IF its a 32bit app, then any system files required by it would be installed in the x86 folder ?
    To answer, it is two-fold, the reasoning behind having two folders. First, for organizational sake as mentioned by an above poster. Second, it lets you, the user, know if an app is x64 native, or x64 compatible. There's a big difference between the two, and another reason why most would suggest leaving the folders alone, using them, and allowing apps to go into the default folders.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 4
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #8

    Thanks very much for the info !
      My Computer


 

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