Windows Sandbox Mode

FizzeBu

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Hey there,

I was playing around with different operating systems, but at the end I just want to go back to my good old Windows 7. But I have one problem and I seek for help here. I do not know if this is the right place, but Backup and Restore sounds good to me. So here we go. :)

My problem is, that I always install lots of crap and I have to reinstall my OS about every month. That's really annoying, I have to install the same software again, configure everything how I want it again and in a month I have to do it again. So I thought about how I could change that and I had to think about the computers at my school. You could save everything to your personal folder, but what you save elsewhere will be deleted and installations will not stay on the system. The user is in a sandbox. That would be perfect for me, I install everything and it stays like that, forever. :eek:

Bit how does that work? What do I need? And are there cons I should think of first? I hope somebody here does know something about that and I also hope you guys don't get mad at me for posting this in the wrong section. Any help is really appreciated!
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit
A Sandbox is really only for temporary opreration. When you close the Sandbox or reboot, everything is gone unlesss you have saved it to your real system - of course after scanning it for viruses.

I think for your case, frequent imaging would be the better solution. All you need is an external disk. I suggest you use free Macrium. To get you started, have a look at my little tutorial: http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/73828-imaging-free-macrium.html?ltr=I

I also suggest that you put your user data into a seperate partition. That makes the OS images smaller and faster and when you restore an image, you user data is not being changed. The user data should be backed up seperately on a regular basis too. For that you can use maging too, but sync would be faster.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000
Another thought is to run a windows seven VM in VirtualBox or WMWare Player for your program testing. You do need another Win 7 licence however for the VM.
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Hewlett-Packard/G62-107SA Notebook
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Service Pack 1
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 CPU M 330 @ 2.13GHz
Motherboard
Hewlett-Packard 1425
Memory
8 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Intel(R) HD Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Builtin
Screen Resolution
1366 x 768 x 32 bits (4294967296 colors) @ 60 Hz
Hard Drives
250 GB SATA Hard Disk Drive 7200 rpm
2TB Seagate GoFlex USB 2 Drive
1TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive
1.5TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive (Samsung)
2TB WD MyBook Live NAS.
Mouse
Logitech Anywhere MX
Internet Speed
152 Mbs download 10 Mbs upload
Antivirus
Norton 360
Browser
Chrome
A Sandbox is really only for temporary opreration. When you close the Sandbox or reboot, everything is gone unlesss you have saved it to your real system - of course after scanning it for viruses.

I think for your case, frequent imaging would be the better solution. All you need is an external disk. I suggest you use free Macrium. To get you started, have a look at my little tutorial: http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/73828-imaging-free-macrium.html?ltr=I

I also suggest that you put your user data into a seperate partition. That makes the OS images smaller and faster and when you restore an image, you user data is not being changed. The user data should be backed up seperately on a regular basis too. For that you can use maging too, but sync would be faster.
Thank you for your answer! :)
This sounds like a good solution and I will probably do it. I just have some questions there: Can I save an image to a partition on the hard drive my system is using? And what's the size for a Win 7 image?
Another thought is to run a windows seven VM in VirtualBox or WMWare Player for your program testing. You do need another Win 7 licence however for the VM.
Thanks for your reply, too! :)
It's not that much about program testing, but the remains of installed programs. I often use software only for a few weeks before I remove it from my system but most of the installers just leave tons of configuration files, images and whatever behind.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit
A Sandbox is really only for temporary opreration. When you close the Sandbox or reboot, everything is gone unlesss you have saved it to your real system - of course after scanning it for viruses.

I think for your case, frequent imaging would be the better solution. All you need is an external disk. I suggest you use free Macrium. To get you started, have a look at my little tutorial: http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/73828-imaging-free-macrium.html?ltr=I

I also suggest that you put your user data into a seperate partition. That makes the OS images smaller and faster and when you restore an image, you user data is not being changed. The user data should be backed up seperately on a regular basis too. For that you can use maging too, but sync would be faster.
Thank you for your answer! :)
This sounds like a good solution and I will probably do it. I just have some questions there: Can I save an image to a partition on the hard drive my system is using? And what's the size for a Win 7 image?
Another thought is to run a windows seven VM in VirtualBox or WMWare Player for your program testing. You do need another Win 7 licence however for the VM.
Thanks for your reply, too! :)
It's not that much about program testing, but the remains of installed programs. I often use software only for a few weeks before I remove it from my system but most of the installers just leave tons of configuration files, images and whatever behind.

In that case whs's solution sounds what you need.
 

My Computer

Computer type
Laptop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Hewlett-Packard/G62-107SA Notebook
OS
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit Service Pack 1
CPU
Intel(R) Core(TM) i3 CPU M 330 @ 2.13GHz
Motherboard
Hewlett-Packard 1425
Memory
8 GB DDR3
Graphics Card(s)
Intel(R) HD Graphics
Sound Card
Realtek High Definition Audio
Monitor(s) Displays
Builtin
Screen Resolution
1366 x 768 x 32 bits (4294967296 colors) @ 60 Hz
Hard Drives
250 GB SATA Hard Disk Drive 7200 rpm
2TB Seagate GoFlex USB 2 Drive
1TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive
1.5TB Iomega Prestige USB 2 Drive (Samsung)
2TB WD MyBook Live NAS.
Mouse
Logitech Anywhere MX
Internet Speed
152 Mbs download 10 Mbs upload
Antivirus
Norton 360
Browser
Chrome
A Sandbox is really only for temporary opreration. When you close the Sandbox or reboot, everything is gone unlesss you have saved it to your real system - of course after scanning it for viruses.

I think for your case, frequent imaging would be the better solution. All you need is an external disk. I suggest you use free Macrium. To get you started, have a look at my little tutorial: http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/73828-imaging-free-macrium.html?ltr=I

I also suggest that you put your user data into a seperate partition. That makes the OS images smaller and faster and when you restore an image, you user data is not being changed. The user data should be backed up seperately on a regular basis too. For that you can use maging too, but sync would be faster.
Thank you for your answer! :)
This sounds like a good solution and I will probably do it. I just have some questions there: Can I save an image to a partition on the hard drive my system is using? And what's the size for a Win 7 image?
Another thought is to run a windows seven VM in VirtualBox or WMWare Player for your program testing. You do need another Win 7 licence however for the VM.
Thanks for your reply, too! :)
It's not that much about program testing, but the remains of installed programs. I often use software only for a few weeks before I remove it from my system but most of the installers just leave tons of configuration files, images and whatever behind.

In that case whs's solution sounds what you need.
Indeed.
I gave you a reputation though, thanks for your time :)
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit
I just have some questions there: Can I save an image to a partition on the hard drive my system is using? And what's the size for a Win 7 image?
You cannot save an image to the same partition that you are imaging. You can, however, save an image to another partition on the same physical disk.

Saving to the same physical disk is usually not recommended because that does not protect you against a failure of that disk. The best is to image to another internal or external (e.g. USB attached) disk.

As to the size - figure about 60% of the actual data that you image. Example: You have a 200GB C:\ partition which contains 50GB of data. The image size would be appr. 30GB (60% of 50GB).

The total partition size does not play a role for the image size - it does, however, play a role when you want to restore the image. That can only be done to a partition which is the same size (or bigger) as the partition from where the image came - at least with free Macrium. The pro version of Macrium can also restore to a smaller partition.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
OS
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
CPU
from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
Monitor(s) Displays
2x HP w2207
Hard Drives
5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
Keyboard
with trackball - no mices
Mouse
Trackball mice
Internet Speed
DSL 6000

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Alienware Aurora ALX R4
OS
Windows 10 Pro (x64)
CPU
Intel Core i7-3930K (3.2GHz - 4.5GHz)
Motherboard
Alienware Aurora-R4 x79
Memory
4x Samsung 4GB PC3-12800 DDR3 (16GB 1600MHz)
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Geforce GTX 690
Sound Card
SteelSeries Siberia Elite
Monitor(s) Displays
Dell UltraSharp U3011
Screen Resolution
2560x1600
Hard Drives
Samsung 850 Pro 256 GB, Seagate 1TB Desktop Hybrid HDD, 2x Western Digital 4TB Green HDD
PSU
875W Some Dell PSU <.<
Case
Alienware Aurora ALX
Cooling
Custom Liquid Cooling (EK CPU & GPU blocks) dual EK 480RAD
Keyboard
Logitech G710+ Mechanical
Mouse
Logitech G700s
Internet Speed
Verizon Fios (50 mbps average)
Other Info
Server: Intel NUC D54250WYK: i5-4250U, 16GB, 256 GB mSATA, Windows Server 2012 R2
My problem is, that I always install lots of crap and I have to reinstall my OS about every month. That's really annoying ...
You didn't say, but I'm guessing your problem is with the uninstall. You're finding it's not (yet!) working as advertised (after all these years of hoped-for improvement)? And you'd rather reinstall the OS, than having to 'dig out' the remains, manually?

Or, you mean, you're having a problem with winsxs going out of control? For that, yes, the cure is periodic reinstallation (or a different operating system :devil:?). That can't be cured, only endured.

Years ago, after a problem with a certain proprietary video player ... it had to be pulled out of the Registry by hand ... I started using monitored installs, with the corresponding uninstalls, for everything. I also started avoiding RealPlayer, but that's another story ...

I started this back in the days of Windows98SE, and am happy to get your confirmation that continuing this with Windows 7 is still worth my time and effort. IMO, the opacity of the Windows Registry is the culprit, when combined with poorly-written software.

My current first-choice is Randy Hall's Primo/CheckUnIn combination -- because it's small, free and it lets you see what it's doing.

The monitored install file generated by Primo is read by CheckUnIn, following a regular uninstallation. Two files are generated by the latter that are used to automatically pull-out whatever the MS Windows uninstallation left behind.

The nice things is, you can examine these files to see how sloppy (or rarely, how neat) the MS Windows un-installation was. Then just run them directly: one a batch file, and the other a .reg file. Then your file system and your Registry is cleaned.

The next item was already mentioned, but only in a Wikipedia link. Here's a bit more detail on its working, for anyone who's never used it.

If I'm not sure if a program is a 'keeper' I set up a sandbox for it in Sandboxie. Other than sandboxing things that touch the Internet, the utility's original purpose, it can also be used to load and execute (most) programs, for evaluation purposes.

Deleting the sandbox removes all traces of the installation, that would normally have been written to the filesystem and to the Registry.

With these two, not only do I not have to periodically reinstall the operating system, but it continues to work like new. Windows 2000 lasted (and is still lasting) about six years, and I hope Windows 7, with care, will do the same.

Let us know if this solves your problem.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 2000 Pro SP4+ / Windows 7 Pro SP1 (both 32-bit)
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