The .wine folder is where the Windows programs you install under your profile using Wine are located. Even if you remove Wine, it still keeps that folder as it is considered user data, not system files. You can delete the .wine folder without harming your system. If you reinstall Wine later, it will recreate the folder the first time you run it.
I know that Fedora uses Gnome, but if you do have KDE installed (or at least the necessary libraries), then
KleanSweep would be the program you need to clear out the clutter:
| Quote: |
KleanSweep allows you to reclaim disk space by finding unneeded files. It can search for files basing on several criterias; you can seek for:
* empty files
* empty directories
* backup files
* broken symbolic links
* broken executables
* dead menu entries (.desktop files pointing to non-existing executables)
* obsolete thumbnails (thumbnails of non-existing images)
* duplicated files
* orphaned files (files not found in RPM or DEB database). |
I've used it a few times and it does a very good job.