Filelight alternatives for Windows
I was recently running Windows on my dual-boot laptop and realized that I was all but out of disk space. Now, granted that this is not a particularly monstrous partition, but I was still surprised that the 30 gigs was so close to exhaustion despite that the fact that I don’t have a lot of media (music, videos) or that many heavy applications (perhaps the biggest is Office).
[[http://www.methylblue.com/filelight/images/filelight-1.0.png|{{ http://www.methylblue.com/filelight/images/filelight-1.0.png?200x200}}]]
Faced with similar situation in Linux, I would immediately fire up [[http://www.methylblue.com/filelight/|Filelight]], an excellent utility that “creates an interactive map of concentric, segmented rings that help visualise disk usage on your computer.” So I went looking around for similar alternatives for Windows.
In the Windows world, it seems that [[wp>Treemap]]s are more popular than radial representation. I did find [[http://treepieblog.blogspot.com/|treepie]] but it wasn’t all that exciting. I then chanced upon [[http://windirstat.info/|WinDirStat]] and [[http://w3.win.tue.nl/nl/onderzoek/onderzoek_informatica/visualization/sequoiaview//|SequoiaView]].
[[http://floatingsun.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/sequoiaview_-_c-03272008-063441pm.jpg|{{ http://floatingsun.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/sequoiaview_-_c-03272008-063441pm.thumbnail.jpg}}]]
[[http://floatingsun.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/c_-_windirstat-03272008-063434pm.jpg|{{ http://floatingsun.net/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/03/c_-_windirstat-03272008-063434pm.thumbnail.jpg}}]]
Both the tools are extremely similar in functionality (and even visuals). SequoiaView seems to be an effort out of the University of Technology at Eindhoven (Netherlands). WinDirStat is almost a direct port (in features and user interface) of [[http://kdirstat.sourceforge.net/|KDirStat]]. In my limited testing, I found SequoiaView to be faster than WinDirStat, but WinDirStat had a better experience overall.
Thanks to these tools, I was quickly able to locate and eliminate the bloat.
I’ve always liked JDiskReport – http://www.jgoodies.com freeware
*@peter*: Oh yeah, I’d completely forgotten about it! I had used JDiskReport several years back, I just didn’t think that JGoodies was still around :-) Thanks for the reminder!
Awesome… I am trying Sequoia right now (no installation required… yay!)and within a minute I can npw see that my C:\ has been infested with various logfiles!!! (especially from VirtualBox).
Am going to try WinRirStat a try too before I start cleaning up…
PS: I googled for ‘filelight windows’ and you topped the results.
http://www.steffengerlach.de/freeware/index.html
I like Spacemonger for this
what about disktective? It is more like filelight in operation. That square mapping of files reminds me of one of the view options in konqueror, I prefer a radial view like filelight.
Like Scott mentioned above, see http://www.steffengerlach.de/freeware/index.html
If you look in the credits for FileLight it acknowledges that it was inspired by Steffen Gerlach’s Scanner:
http://filelight.sourcearchive.com/documentation/1.9~rc2/main_8cpp-source.html
Great explanation:
http://www.makeuseof.com/tag/visualize-disk-usage-windows-scanner/