- Local time
- 1:04 PM
- Posts
- 429
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro 24H2
I looked at the scripts for installations, but it would take far longer to setup the scripts than to just install the apps. I think scripts are the key if you're doing a lot of similar installations on multiple machines. I see much less utility for scripts for a one-off machine build.
The big thing I like about a clean install is I get a clean slate. Over a few years, I end up with a lot of crap that was installed, used once of a few times, and then forgotten. I leave those behind when I do a clean install and end up with a much more lean and mean installation.
Agreed. I've never seen a Windows system that didn't run better after I was "forced" into a clean install. That goes back to 3.1 and hasn't changed. Eventually, you need to do one.
I've taken to just looking over the Program Files directory and Desktop folders to make sure I don't miss anything after I do all the major components. Some stuff, like shortcuts, can be copied. Other stuff needs an install. That gets me to 97% of what I need done.
Ideally I have an identical (my backup) system to do the fresh build on and just run side-by-side until it's ready. Then I can do it in my "spare" time as I work with no downtime.
That progression would give me the Willies, hard to imagine there aren't some hidden gems waiting to bite you there.![]()
My thoughts too. I'd buy the gray-ware $15 StackSocial Win 11 Pro and do a fresh install.
@Bree, while I've never tried it, can't you pull your product key out, do a fresh install (even on an evolved system), and use it to re-activate the same hardware? Obviously it's registered at MS as a valid key for Win 11.
I understand about a system with software that can no longer be re-installed... that's a different issue.
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows 11 Pro 24H2
- Computer type
- Laptop
- Manufacturer/Model
- HP
- CPU
- Intel Ultra 7 155H
- Memory
- 16gb
- Graphics Card(s)
- Intel Arc integrated
- Hard Drives
- SSD