Cleanmymac 2 2 2 0 Cracked Egg

 
Cleanmymac 2 2 2 0 Cracked EggFree

I was just wondering, many people seem to be against such apps. I personally love cleanmymac3. I've used it for 2 years now and it has cleaned 80GB of useless bullshit files from my computer, such as broken downloads, useless languages for apps, caches.

My computer is also a 2011 macbook air and it is still running relatively smoothly (I do also take good care of my computer myself though - without the app, I keep my files organized and the physical computer in good shape). I often torrent or download things off the internet, and cleanmymac has allowed me to do that more comfortably. Why do so many people dislike it? What's bad about it? I generally have nothing against recommending paid apps but CleanMyMac has a track record of fucking things up (just google cleanmymac and data loss). If you know what you are doing then most tools do not pose a real threat anyway but recommending them to everyone especially newcomers is a very bad idea.

Cleanmymac 2 2 2 0 Cracked Egg

Cleanmymac 2 2 2 0 Cracked Egg Free

Also saving a GB here or there hardly justifies it's price. MacPaw make very nice apps but cleanmymac is not really necessary and mostly does more harm than good (newcomers probably do not even read the warnings it shows;-p). Part of the problem might be how you guys communicate to your market. I was in the Apple store yesterday talking to a 'genius' to fix something on my keyboard. He saw CleanMyMac and told me to get rid of it, saying it was 'adware.' He said that CMM doesn't really do anything. When I asked him if CMM was stealing my personal information or putting nasty things on my Mac, he said no but it doesn't really do anything so you don't need it. Fsx boeing 787 with vc.

That did not sound right to me, so I've been searching around for input/insight. If some of Apple's support people are lumping CMM in with real malware/adware, and assuming that it is neither of those things, there is some work to do around helping experts understand what your tool does for the average user and why it is different from rightly hated nasty-ware.