Access the start menu and type into the search bar: "Temp" - this will bring up your temporary files.
Control Panel -> Appearance and Personalization, Locate "Folder Options", and there is a link next to it "Show hidden files and folders".
Temp folder & Temporary Internet Files folder.
Go to the system files, locate the temp folder, do a copy and paste. That's all there is to it.
that is in the temporary files folder.
i386 folder.
You can delete it all, they are temporary files.
You can find it here Unhide files go to X:\Users\YourUserName\AppData\Local\Mozilla\Firefox\Profiles\ Open the .default folder, locate your files in the cache folder although it won't be much of a use because firefox stores them as files of its own making which cannot be directly accessed by windows
Files found in the "misc" folder can vary, but they often include miscellaneous or miscellaneous files that do not fit into specific categories. These files may include temporary files, logs, or other data that do not have a designated folder elsewhere on the system.
No. I regularly delete everything in my Temp folder. They are not needed.
Depending upon the Windows version, the folder used for cache files is different. For Windows 8, the most up-to-date version of Windows at present, the folder is named "INetCache."
In Outlook, temporary files are typically stored in a hidden folder on your computer. The default location for these files is usually found at C:\Users\<YourUsername>\AppData\Local\Microsoft\Windows\INetCache\Content.Outlook\. This folder holds temporary copies of attachments and other items when you open them from email messages.
Quote from the related link: "Often referred to as the cache, the Temporary internet Files folder contains a kind of travel record of the items you have seen, heard, or downloaded from the Web, including images, sounds, Web pages, even cookies. Typically these items are stored in the Temporary Internet Files folder. Storing these files in your cache can make browsing the Web faster because it usually takes your computer less time to display a Web page when it can call up some of the page's elements or even the entire page from your local Temporary Internet Files folder."