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Fat File Finder 2.6.8 was available as a giveaway on November 28, 2021!
Fat File Finder is the quickest way to find big files in your computer and remove them to gain disk space.
With Fat File Finder, you select a folder to be the root of search, a minimum size of the files to look for, and Fat File Finder searches folders and sub-folders, finding you the files matching the criteria. With Fat File Finder, you can also specify a size range to search.
After locating the big files Fat File Finder allows you to select those you no longer use and trash them or remove them to gain space immediately. Fat File Finder presents a pie chart representing real-time free & utilized disk space.
Fat File Finder can search any folder on your computer, including the system folders, so if you choose to remove a file under a system folder, make sure you know what you are removing.
Main Features:
1. Fat File Finder finds files on any folder including system folders.
2. Recursive search of folders and sub-folders. You can limit how many subfolders down the tree to search.
3. You can trash or remove files permanently to gain space immediately.
4. Pie graph representing real-time free and used disk space.
Extra Features:
1. Ability to search for a size range.
2. Ability to refine searches.
2. Ability to switch space unit to KB, MB, or GB.
3. Fast search.
Fat File Finder will help you free up disk space you no longer use. The tool is straightforward, effective, and fast.
Windows 7/ 8/ 10
1.2 MB
lifetime
$ 19.90
Fat file doesn't mean the file is bad or unnecessary.
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Installed pre-activated app easily on Lenovo Desktop 12GB Ram. 555GB/3TB free. It scanned the drive in 2 or 3 minutes and found the largest files. This was helpful, as I had a couple of duplicates in different folders. On my wish list would be the option to move the found files to another folder. Other than that, it works as advertised. I recommend it. Thank you for the opportunity.
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Fat File Finder can search the entire drive or start from a sub folder and allows to search for files by their file size such as finding those over 10 MB or 1 GB, but not filter by file types such as .mp4 files which should be added, and allows to search a range of min/max file size. I experienced crashing during search unfortunately when setting depth of search too high from scanning the full drive (C) (path or filename too long).
I decided to try this giveaway as I have used the free WinDirStat for years which can scan local partitions, entire hard disk drive, or a folder, presenting the results for used (and free) space on the drive with a colorful graphical display, a tree display of all folders sorted by file types and is also a cleanup tool as it allows you to delete files that take much space. The advantage of using this type of tool is that you can identify files that took the most space on the drive and you can also delete them directly from the main program interface.
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DataDragon, The filter by extension, is a great idea. I will implement it. If you wish, I can analyze the crash to solve it.
Ferri
PCWinSoft Software
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DataDragon,
I still use WinDirStat myself. It's old, hasn't been updated in many years, but it continues to get the job done and then some. Quality programming right there that just continues to work, even on the newest of OSes.
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1. Looking for only on the NTFS file system?
2. On external hard drives, flash drives, memory cards (they usually have FAT32) will search?
3. Is this program better than "Locate32" ("Locate32" on "Windows7-64" works)?
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Small footprint on the system, you can easily see the remaining space on the drive (something that Windows 10 & 11 took away for some reason), and you can find the files taking up the most space on the drive. While I won't be making too much use of the app other than just to check how much space is left on my drives, I don't think I'd spend money on the app, so thanks for the giveaway!
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I'm uncertain about Windows 11, but on Windows 10 you can easily see the "remaining space" on your drives.
Just left click on the folder icon on your toolbar and you will see your "tree view" on the left side. From there just left click on "This PC" you will then see your main drive (Local Drive C:) and you will see how much space is free on the drive.
If you right click on (Local Drive C:) you can go to "Properties" and it will break the drive stats down to exact numbers.
You can also just type in "this PC" (without the quotes) in the search and it will shortcut you to the Local Drive C and you can see the free space that way on Windows 10 as well.
The search is just to the right of the window icon on your lower left side of the toolbar.
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