Versions:

  • 5.1.0

Space Radar Electron, developed by Joshua Koo under the zz85 handle, is a cross-platform utility designed for interactive visualization of disk space and memory consumption. Released in version 5.1.0, the application belongs to the disk-analysis category and translates raw storage statistics into three complementary chart types—Sunburst, Treemap, and Flamegraph—so users can instantly spot disproportionately large folders, duplicate collections, or forgotten caches. The Sunburst view presents concentric rings whose angular width corresponds to relative size, making it easy to descend from system-wide overviews to individual file inspection with a single click; the Treemap subdivides a rectangular canvas into nested tiles whose area directly reflects storage footprint, ideal for comparing sibling directories at the same hierarchical level; the Flamegraph stacks hierarchical data vertically, highlighting cumulative memory usage along call paths that resemble performance-profiling graphs. These interchangeable perspectives serve a variety of real-world use cases: system administrators can locate log directories that threaten to exhaust server partitions, multimedia producers can identify leftover render files before archiving projects, developers can visualize build-artifact bloat across branches, and everyday laptop owners can decide which game or cloud-cache folder to offload when solid-state storage runs low. Because the tool parses storage metadata locally and renders everything inside an Electron shell, scans finish rapidly without transmitting sensitive paths to external services, and the resulting charts can be exported as static images for reports or shared dashboards. Space Radar Electron is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are supplied through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, guaranteeing that the latest version is always fetched, while the same repository supports batch installation alongside other applications if desired.

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