You no longer have to worry about the OS becoming sluggish on it's own, as in XP. If
you practice good usage habits, you'll be fine.
I have never had XP become sluggish. Not so much a matter of good usage habits as it is good maintenance practices. Defragging, Keeping malware, spyware, crapware out an such. My Windows 7 is at the moment sluggish only because I faile to do routine maintenance, namely, I havn't ran Superantispyware, malwarebytes or spybot in a long time .....its been way too long. So it can happen and new Windows versions are not exempt from any of these issues although I agree bbearren saying it may be easyer to automate maintenance routines with the newer ones.
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If one performs routine system maintenance regularly (much of which can be setup in
Task Manager to be taken care of automatically) uses a good AV such as MSE, and
practices safe surfing, there is no real need to reformat/reinstall Windows from time to
time, either. I haven't done a reformat/reinstall since Windows 95 OSR2.
I echo that remark, remark, remark ...........
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I was using Windows 3.1, many years ago, a number of my personal programs (like Microsoft Word,
for example) used to place *.ini files and certain other files into the c:\windows or system
directory.
Not just back in the days of Windows 3.1.
Microsoft Office 2010 insisted on placing a number of files on C:\Program Files, and
created the folder
Actually, from personal experience, not just MS Office 2010 but Office XP and Office 2007 also wanted to install files to the System drive (usually C: )
(but I had reset the default path to Program Files in the registry),
Do tell. What registry entries and how many?
tell me: as these updates keep coming, do they pile up on the c:\ drive, or do they remove earlier ones and keep things slim? (I guess I've always had a fear that they'll eventually choke the space!)
Thanks again.
Actually they, as DeaconFrost said, 'Most will update features and files already present on your computer.' However, there will be additional files as well. When I installed XP in 2002, the window dir was 900MB. After 6-8 monthes it grew to 1.2GB. After over a year it was 1.7GB and after 2 years it was over 2GB. Look at XP sp3 today and I believe it is over 7GB. OS's inevitably grow. Even linux in recent years has implimented network updates on their LTR's Of cours when I installed Windows 7 it was between 10-12GB with sp1 and after updates frew to 14GB.
I agree, but
Someone may have to install programs on a different HD/Partition such as "D" because of space issues.
With a small SSD "C" Drive for the OS, it makes sense to install programs on a different HD "D" drive.
If I did that, I'd Image backup (and restore) both C and D together - to keep them and the registry synced.
I agree as that is probably the easiest and most foolproof. However. I have had
additional programs on another partition and my data on a third for some time on an XP
machine.
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gregrocker
Is that you with the surfboard and do you actually have a touch screen embedded in it? And if the response is yes I will have to say, "Are you kidding me you maniacally inclined megalomaniac.