There is a "Startup Applications" section on Glary's community site, which lists a variety of potential startup entries, ranging from harmless, to useless, to necessary, to varying degrees of dangerous. But Glary Utilities doesn't claim to remove viruses and other forms of malware. It seems reasonable to assume these undesirable startup entries would be either adware, spyware or malware. I cannot find any documentation that explains what “dangerous startup entries” are or how Glary Utilities’ 1-Click Maintenance detects and neutralizes them. ![]() ![]() Functions include a registry cleaner, invalid shortcuts fixer, temporary files cleaner, spyware and adware remover, and a couple of unusual entries.Ī “startup manager” option supposedly “cleans up dangerous startup entries.” It didn’t find any on my system. The “1-Click Maintenance” screen lets you select the maintenance functions to be run each time you click the “Scan for issues” button. The program’s user interface is nice and clean. Glary Utilities does all the maintenance chores that you’d expect to find in such a package, and throws in some non-standard functions as well. ![]() It is free for personal use, and CNET ranks it #1 in their Utilities category. Glarysoft’s Glary Utilities is a popular system maintenance toolkit for Windows XP, Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 8 computers.
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