For a thorough and clear answer to the eternal question of where all the space on your new disk went, consult TreeSize Professional. The interface allows you to easily find and delete files that waste space. TreeSize Professional analyzed disk usage quickly in our tests. You can analyze any folder by right-clicking it and choosing the Context Menu command. It displays files and folders both as graphs and as detailed lists. In Visual mode, you can choose between pie and bar graphs, as well as change colors for better legibility. The Detailed view lets you see statistics by user and file type. You can limit the scan to files created in the past however-many days. The program saves results in XML, HTML, and Excel formats, and the extensive functionality makes TreeSize Professional attractive for system administrators.
TreeSize Professional is a powerful and flexible hard-disk-space manager for Windows 98, Me, NT, 2000, XP, and 2003. Find out which folders are the largest and recover megabytes from them. Choose several folders or drives and TreeSize Professional shows you their size; the allocated and wasted space in them; the number of files as well as 3D, bar, and pie charts in them; the last access date; the file owner; and the NTFS compression rate. It also lets you search for old, big, and temporary files. The application has an intuitive Explorer-like user interface, and it's fast and multithreaded. You can print detailed reports or export the collected data to Excel and to an HTML, XML, or ASCII file. TreeSize Professional can be started from the context menu of every folder or drive.
Version 3.2.1 removes some noncritical error messages that sometimes occured when the application was terminated while scans were running. This version also brings back the Toolbars submenu in the View menu.
Write your own reviewBe the first one to review TreeSize Professional 3.2.1 and share your experience with the CNET community! Previous versions: See all user reviews
Thanks for your submission!
Thank you for helping us maintain CNET's great community.