Omega Owners Forum
Chat Area => General Discussion Area => Topic started by: zirk on 20 January 2016, 10:54:19
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Had another major update on my machine this week, which I kept putting off as too busy to be looking at blue screens again if it went a bit silly (again).
So let it run, and sure enough update took awhile, with lots of, 'its improved, new features, dont turn off your PC' blah blah, with a message at the end saying allk your data is where it was or something on long them lines, anyway, when finished, I noticed I was 25GB better off on my C drive, which you may or may not consider it be advantages, but 25 GB of free space is a fair chunk, especially when I go the the trouble of storing most of my data on other partitions of the HD to keep my C drive low and to make back ups easier.
So my intial thoughts were the update has probably emptied my download folder and or any restore points data, but no, it had actually wiped my Windows Old / Users Data, things like App Data, Desktop Folders etc, the Folders where still there but not much in them.
The windows old, is or was, in my case, pretty much a windows image or your old OS system, so should you decide to roll back to your previous OS, this was the important bit, but it also contains any data or files you had kicking around that didn't form part of your Local Folders, like documents, Pictures, Images, Downloads etc.
So if like me you had files and folders on your old destop or you need access to old App Data files, then back them up now, or just take a System Image of Windows Old and stash it some where, taking a image of it also lets recover your old system when used system recovery boot method as a last resort. Win 10 is also pretty good at managing disk image files easily.
Luckerly for me I did a back up of Windows / Old when I moved over to Win10 both before and after the Install. :y
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Your data? Hang on, you did read the (laughable) EULA?
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Your data? Hang on, you did read the (laughable) EULA?
Yea, ;D thats the one that in conjunction with UAC that asks you; are you sure?, 'do you really want to make changes' etc, but then decides Windows can actually do what ever its please's, that one. ::)
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Yep. Windows can indeed do whatever it pleases, apparently.
It faces one formidable challenge first, in the case of any of my PCs, however. Until it can install itself remotely against the user's wishes, with no manual interaction, I guess it's out of luck.
I'm sure they'll crack that one day, but that's OK, because it'll be in the EULA somewhere. ::)
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With Windows 10 you have 28 days to go back to your old OS so that's probably why its been deleted, after that you have to get hold of a disc to do a clean install, unless of course you have a image of your previous system.
I had to do a clean install of 8.1 on my old laptop as it wasn`t happy with Win 10 but the option to go back to 8.1 had gone from the options in Control Panel.
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With Windows 10 you have 28 days to go back to your old OS so that's probably why its been deleted, after that you have to get hold of a disc to do a clean install, unless of course you have a image of your previous system.
I had to do a clean install of 8.1 on my old laptop as it wasn`t happy with Win 10 but the option to go back to 8.1 had gone from the options in Control Panel.
Well it thought about it long enough, had win10 on that machine since last June from memory. ::) and yes,its been up datted on a regarler basis.
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Well, you really should back up your data anyway, irrespective of MS's current desire to enforce Win10. Bless them.
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I do, everything goes onto my E & F drives, C is a smallish SSD that is primarily for my OS, Games and downloads that way a clean install is pretty painless.
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I do, everything goes onto my E & F drives, C is a smallish SSD that is primarily for my OS, Games and downloads that way a clean install is pretty painless.
I meant back up to a separate device altogether. If there is anything you really don't want to lose, it should also be stored away from your home ;)
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I do, everything goes onto my E & F drives, C is a smallish SSD that is primarily for my OS, Games and downloads that way a clean install is pretty painless.
I meant back up to a separate device altogether. If there is anything you really don't want to lose, it should also be stored away from your home ;)
But....don't ask TB to store it in his garage for you...... ::)
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I do, everything goes onto my E & F drives, C is a smallish SSD that is primarily for my OS, Games and downloads that way a clean install is pretty painless.
I meant back up to a separate device altogether. If there is anything you really don't want to lose, it should also be stored away from your home ;)
But....don't ask TB to store it in his garage for you...... ::)
Or it'll end up stored far away.
Smouldering.
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I do, everything goes onto my E & F drives, C is a smallish SSD that is primarily for my OS, Games and downloads that way a clean install is pretty painless.
I meant back up to a separate device altogether. If there is anything you really don't want to lose, it should also be stored away from your home ;)
Does an external hard drive count ::)
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I do, everything goes onto my E & F drives, C is a smallish SSD that is primarily for my OS, Games and downloads that way a clean install is pretty painless.
I meant back up to a separate device altogether. If there is anything you really don't want to lose, it should also be stored away from your home ;)
But....don't ask TB to store it in his garage for you...... ::)
Far cough...
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I do, everything goes onto my E & F drives, C is a smallish SSD that is primarily for my OS, Games and downloads that way a clean install is pretty painless.
I meant back up to a separate device altogether. If there is anything you really don't want to lose, it should also be stored away from your home ;)
Does an external hard drive count ::)
That's fine, but worth considering if events (fire, burst water tank, flood etc) could destroy all copies at the same time, hence the suggestion to keep at a different location.
Worth considering 3 copies - laptop, external device stored elsewhere (at least a different room in house, but ideally elsewhere), and a commercial cloud service.
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I have allways formatted my PC and created a second partition or added a second drive to the PC, when windows is installed then I move "My Documents" folder to the partition or 2nd hard drive. This has served me well over the years as windows once scrambled all the files, annother suffered some bad sectors, but my data and photgraphs were safe.
I now find myself using multiple PC's, laptops, mobile etc. so was wondering if there was an easy way to have a central "My Documents" that could either auto update or all share, plus automatically mrroe to another drive.
I do back up to severall drives but end up with various copies (at different stages) of a lot of my spread sheets, and when backing them up last time accidently overwrote a few of them and lost some critical information.
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Well ever since that update, when booting now I get a dual boot screen, asking me which OS I want to boot to, Win10 or my previous Old OS, this is new, could have been a handy feature when my old OS was on the drive, seems a bit bloody pointless now windows has decided to wipe it off. ::) ::) ::) ;D