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How often do you (re)install your OS?

I spend enough of my time installing windows for other people.

I install it for myself as little as possible. Usually only system swaps.
 
I hate that when you have a license to Windows, it still installs bloatshit, I understand that in the case of unregistered computers, but one with a Pro license? Come on...
100% agree! It's pathetic. What's worse is that they make this a PITA to remove and that's not ok.

I spend enough of my time installing windows for other people.

I install it for myself as little as possible. Usually only system swaps.
Same here.
 
100% agree! It's pathetic. What's worse is that they make this a PITA to remove and that's not ok.
I mean, when you pay from something, that software/service should be 110% ad-free and not install any unwanted crap.

I can live with that on some services (like Spotify free) when they play an ad from time to time, but come on, a Windows Pro license with unwanted shit? :/
 
More importantly, how often do you open and close windows? Mine open around 70-80 degrees with a cooler. Thats the price you pay for double glazed cheapies. I miss the old days when they slapped open far and wide, literally kissing the outer wall.
 
Never, unless I'm having some undiagnosable system issues or im doing a new build.

Haven't had weird system issues for at least 7+ years and my newest build was 3 years ago and is rock solid...
 
but CCleaner is easier/faster and does it without missing anything.
Totally agree! :)

Again, what I REALLY like about CCleaner is you can tell it which cookies to keep whereas Disk Cleanup and most other programs delete them all. And for sure, sometimes a total purging is nice, but not always, or even most of the time, IMO.

So, for example, I have CCleaner set to keep my TPU, other forums', and other sites' cookies I visit regularly. Then, when I want to clean the clutter, I run CCleaner. But unlike Disk Cleanup, I don't have to re-enter all my log in credentials again upon my next visit to those sites. VERY NICE!! :)

Some may feel keeping login credentials is a risk in itself. I disagree with MY scenario. And that is, this is my personal computer in my private home with me being the only user. There are no co-workers (I'm retired), friends, family members, or friends of family members who could step up to my computer when I was away - at least not without my prior permission and that's not happening. I have other "guest" computers they can use with my "guest" network access.

Plus, I can always manually log out of TPU or wherever and that will purge those cookies, or I can simply tell CCleaner to purge them all.

Generally, I only recommend CCleaner for cookie/clutter management and to "maintain" a working computer in optimal condition. I do NOT subscribe to any "hype" that any of these programs, including CCleaner, will make our computers run "better than ever". That's marketing hogwash.

I also do not recommend or suggest CCleaner for fixing or repairing a "broken" computer. HOWEVER - in some cases (a couple dozen actually, over the years) it has for me. BUT, these are specific circumstances always involving swapping major hardware components - specifically graphics cards from NVIDIA to AMD, or AMD to NVIDIA where some sort of corruption has occurred that was preventing the total uninstall of the old drivers, or complete install of the new. In those specific scenarios, running CCleaner's registry cleaner after running the uninstall of the old, then rebooting has allowed the install of the new card and its drivers to proceed without issues.

On "my" systems, I do run the registry cleaner after major OS updates, or major MS Office updates, for example. But this is ONLY on my machines where I have been running the cleaner since day one, again, to maintain it in optimal condition. I would not run it on a 5 year old system that has never had the cleaner used on it.

That said, I have probably, without exaggerating, run CCleaner well over a 1000 times and dozens, perhaps 100s of systems over the years and never, not once has it bricked a computer. At worse, the system locked but cleared with a simple reboot. Still, I make sure I have a current backup - just in case. I would hate to have a power outage in the middle of a cleaning and my UPS fails to kick in. :( (Had that happen once with a BIOS flash - not pretty. :()

Oh, and BTW, another nice thing about CCleaner is it always prompts to backup the registry before it makes any changes. For that reason alone, I recommend using it instead of Regedit.

Generally speaking, I do not encourage the use of registry cleaners because typically, due to the way Windows accesses registry entries, it just is not necessary. But the above examples are the exceptions and I only recommend CCleaner for that. I do not trust any other registry cleaner or "optimization" program, in part because they tend to be too aggressive while CCleaner is probably the most conservative - and that's a good thing. And it is because of that conservatism that I get really frustrated when [ignorant?] people immediately condemn CCleaner by claiming all registry cleaners are evil. True, some are. But not all registry cleaners are alike.

Ironically, many of those who automatically condemn CCleaner for its registry cleaner feature will readily recommend programs like Revo Uninstaller, Wise Program Uninstaller or IObit Uninstaller. Yet what are those but disk and registry cleaners. :kookoo: It makes no sense (hence my "ignorant" moniker earlier).

Oh well. Got OT again. Time to get back on track.
 
Well, had to have a fresh Win11 install since my OS SSD died. Installing all software is just as crappy as always.
 
Well, had to have a fresh Win11 install since my OS SSD died. Installing all software is just as crappy as always.

If you had a backup image, it would take less than 10 minutes to get it done...
 
If you had a backup image, it would take less than 10 minutes to get it done...
Or if I'd picked the right lottery numbers last time, I'd be rich. If'ing is just too late now and I'm already done, just need to re-download some games.
 
Or if I'd picked the right lottery numbers last time, I'd be rich. If'ing is just too late now and I'm already done, just need to re-download some games.

Best time make that image is right after new install and tweaking... just saying.
 
once a year usually, or if I have a large PC upgrade, altho this time on a platform upgrade i haven't bothered so far and it seems fine AM4->AM5

used to do it like every 3 months many years ago, but windows these days seem a bit more reliable and less prone to crashes/blue screens.
 
Well, had to have a fresh Win11 install since my OS SSD died. Installing all software is just as crappy as always.
It's easier when you make most of your software run in a portable or quasi-portable mode. That's what I do. A standard Windows install for me takes all of 4 or 5 hours for the OS, drivers, security config, programs and games.

If you had a backup image, it would take less than 10 minutes to get it done...
While that's a great option for many, it's doesn't work for everyone. It's an idea worth exploring for most.
 
When it breaks?
 
While it has been years for me, one thing that makes a full "format and install" go quicker is, when setting up initially, you move your Documents folder to a secondary drive, and install all your programs on a secondary drive too. That is, put only the OS and HW drivers on the boot drive.
 
Never. My last two platform upgrades I just swapped the mobo/cpu and it turned out to work with zero issues.
 
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Well I just did a clean install recently for my Windows SSD. I've been messing with getting ReBarEFI installed on my X79 board, and I didn't have an EFI installation, which is necessary for things to work. Keeping Ivy E going strong! :D
 
I clean install windows only when needed. When everything breaks or when I do large update, like MB.

Years ago I bought some music CD for my boy. Bob the Builder or something. It's DRM shitted the whole system down, had to clean install everything. That was the last intrusive DRM-anything installed in my system.

I think 3 to 5 years is the normal between my clean installs. That's why I have a NAS nowadays. Hard lessons, for sure.
 
I used to do it very often in the days of windows 95 and 98 because it breaks and the only solution or the quickest solution is just to reinstall, but not anymore. My current windows 10 installation in my main machine has been there since 2017, so that's about 8 years. I have to admit, windows became more stable than before. But I remember I did it once few years back for my laptop. It didn't want to boot and I almost tried everything one can think of with no avail so I had to nuke it.
 
I now use OpenBSD -current and have been using it for almost a year without any problems. It is less reliable than the stable version, there is a greater chance that an update will suddenly make your system unusable. But I feel like OpenBSD -current is as reliable as macOS and windows11. I often see with both Windows and macOS users that their system suddenly has a software problem after an update, sometimes making their system unusable.

I used to use FreeBSD and it was very good at switching from one version to another. I have used it for over 5 years and it has never had any problems until I replaced my hardware. FreeBSD is never described as a rolling release system, but you can always switch to the latest stable version for decades without it ever seeming to be a problem. Think of it as from windows7 --> windows8 --> windows10 --> windows11. FreeBSD does this version switching in a more reliable way than windows.

I put Void Linux on a laptop and it is also quite reliable for endless hassle-free system upgrades. Once or twice a year, you have to do a manual fix. But Void Linux is very close to the point where it can update itself automatically without ever giving a problem.
 
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