ALFAHIM Group is one of the UAE’s most successful family businesses. The company was founded by the late Abdul Jalil Al Fahim in 1958, a visionary entrepreneur who led the company until his passing in 1996.
Our HistoryALFAHIM Group constantly seeks to grow and build its status as a major contributor to the socio-economic development of the UAE.The group has evolved into a dynamic and diversified organization with a global footprint. Our commitment to delivering quality, sustainability, and customer satisfaction has been the cornerstone of our success.
With Head Offices in Fairmont Bab Al Bahr in Abu Dhabi and Sheikh Zayed Road in Dubai, ALFAHIM Group has grown in line with the development of the UAE.
About UsA diverse conglomerate with business interest spanning multiple industries. Our dynamic portfolio of businesses is united by a commitment to quality, sustainability, and customer satisfaction.
They deleted the folder entirely. Nothing broke. Her next backup was a fresh 12GB.
Inside, he found a single folder with a long, cryptic name—a string of letters and numbers. He checked its size: . itune backup folder
That was the iTunes backup of his wife’s old iPhone 6S. The phone itself had only 64GB of storage. So how was the backup three times larger? Because iTunes, by default, backs up the device repeatedly, preserving old snapshots and accumulating logs, old app data, and cached files that no longer exist on the phone. Worse, Apple never provided a built-in tool to see or manage these backups from within iTunes on Windows—you had to dig manually. They deleted the folder entirely
Then one day, while digging through hidden folders, he stumbled upon a path most users never see: C:\Users\[Username]\AppData\Roaming\Apple Computer\MobileSync\Backup\ Inside, he found a single folder with a
A few years ago, a freelance photographer named Alex noticed his Windows PC was constantly running out of space. He had a 500GB hard drive, yet only 20GB were free. He ran disk cleaners, deleted old downloads, and even removed some games. Nothing helped.
Alex confronted his wife. “Why does your phone backup take up half my hard drive?” She had no idea—she’d simply plugged in her phone every week and clicked “Back Up.” Over two years, iTunes had quietly stacked backup after backup inside that same folder, never deleting older data, never warning her.
The lesson: the iTunes backup folder is a digital black hole—out of sight, out of mind, until it consumes your drive. Apple has since moved to iCloud backups by default, but for millions of Windows users, that cryptic folder still lurks, silently growing. And unless you know exactly where to look, you’ll never find it.
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