FolderSizes 9.7 is Available
We’re excited to announce the latest version of FolderSizes, packed with significant improvements and critical bug fixes to enhance your file system analysis experience.
Key Improvements
FolderSizes v9.7 brings enhanced compatibility with official support for Windows Server 2025, ensuring seamless operation on the latest server platforms. The user interface has received substantial refinements, including improved default UI element font sizing, enhanced folder map layout with optimized aspect ratios and margins, and dynamic gradient rendering for more visually appealing displays.
Reporting capabilities have been significantly expanded. The new version introduces extended file size report default ranges, adds a ’20-60 Years’ default range to file age reporting, and greatly expands File Categories report groups. A notable new feature allows file extensions to be contained in multiple File Categories, providing more flexible and comprehensive file classification.
Our technical optimizations include improved NTFS MFT file residency test heuristics, an optimized default XSLT template for XML exports, and enhanced trend data import procedures. The toolbar icon states now more accurately reflect the current theme selection, improving overall user experience.
Bug Fixes
Our development team has meticulously addressed several critical issues that could impact system performance and user experience. We’ve fixed an incorrect snapshot node owner serialization problem, resolved rare buffer overflow scenarios during snapshot import, and eliminated snapshot generation concurrency issues.
We’ve also resolved rare unhandled exceptions that could occur when loading scan data and fixed limitations in drilling down into very large file report size ranges. These fixes ensure more stable and reliable performance across various system configurations.
Upgrade Today
Update to FolderSizes v9.7 to take advantage of these comprehensive improvements and enjoy a more robust file system analysis tool. Our latest version represents a significant step forward in file system management and analysis capabilities.