Jump to content

How often do you reinstall?


spacesurfer

Reinstall Frequency  

328 members have voted

  1. 1. How often do you reinstall your OS on your personal computer?

    • More than once per day - for testing installations
      15
    • Once a week
      13
    • Once a month
      115
    • Once a year
      113
    • Never - that's what imaging software is for
      33
    • Never done it - mine is littered with spyware but keeps on ticking
      6


Recommended Posts


Why is there no "twice a year" option? I used to reformat either once every month, or once every 3 months. Now, with my new, stable machine, I'm able to go about 6 months before I need to reclaim the TB of storage I have (in a RAID 0+1 config, which amounts to 465GB useable space).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Lately for me it's been yearly, but I'm also not so obsessed with running XP that's been slimmed down with the latest nLite anymore. :P

Zxian recently got me fond of Acronis True Image. I don't reformat anymore, I just restore my HD with a 5 GB image file stored on my second harddrive. I can screw up all I want now. lol

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If the image is crapped and you don't have a UA disc, you'll have to start from scratch.

I made a ghost bootable dvd and tried to include the image on it but the maximum size dvdrws I have are 4.7gb :(

What I do is make a base image - a fresh install. Then install my software then make another image. Then personalize with my accounts and make another image.

All of these images are < 1.6 GB. I keep them on a separate HDD rather than burn 'em on a CD. It takes minutes (< 5) to go back to whichever state I need to.

I did once burn the image to a DVD but with the updated versions (using RyanVM), I gave that up. I'll never use that DVD, so I just store it on HDD. DVD restore would also be slower!

Of course, you're HDD can fail, like my second HDD did - I lost everything. But again, you can alway reinstall.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I reinstalled XP Pro SP2 yesterday using a UA disc. Straight away, without even logging in, I made an image using Acronis True Image. This way I hope I will never reinstall Windows again on this computer, even though I kind of enjoy it [ :blink::whistle: ] if I am really bored and have nothing else to do / or if there is a significant hardware change. The main thing that stops me reinstalling / restoring images frequently is that the computer is shared between 7 people, so I don't like messing with or having to setup their accounts / settings etc. all the time. Afterwards, I made an image after all the Windows Updates had been applied, drivers installed and major programs which I hope to restore whenever something even slightly goes wrong. There will always be a use for re-installing Windows [apart from killing time and boredom] despite the obvious advantages of disk imaging.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I Ghost my system whenever it is necessary. A clean install of XP takes toooo much time for me since I have to install about 3 GIGS of other software as well.

Take care and kind regards,

Paul van Bommel

:D

The neat thing about Ghost 2003 (Ghost.exe) is that it will run from a DOS boot disk (floppy or CD) and it will burn its image file to a second partition, second hard drive or even to a CD or DVD. It will also span CD/DVD's if the file size exceeds the disk size.

I make quickie backups to my second partition on my SATA drive, at least two or three times a week. Then about once a week or so, I make the backup to DVD. Ghost installs itself on the DVD as the boot sector and thusly makes the DVD self booting.

Good drive maintenance keeps my backup Image file size down to what a DVD can handle (with max compression).

Running Ghost 2003 from a boot disk bypasses all the windows BS and gets the job done in the fastest possible. time. On my SATA drive that takes only four minutes. Burning to a DVD takes about a half hour or so.

No bid deal.

Now, for the worlds best defrag, do a Ghost backup followed immediately by a Ghost restore and all files are rewritten in perfect order with NO spaces and NO fragmentation.

Afterward, my HD looks like THIS, when viewed by Windows Defrag.

A reinstall of Windows is NEVER required if you have a Ghost image on a DVD of your system all set up the way you want it.

Of course if you're a total masochist and really into PAIN.....reload windows to your hearts content.

You have my blessing! :thumbup

Andromeda43 B)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...