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obermd wrote: You missed Windows Server 2008 R2 SP2 then.
There was an SP2 for 2008 R2?
I maintain my own archive for all Windows versions (for dev testing and such, make sure I have all the latest that was ever published for each OS without having to hunt them down on the internet since they can disappear without any notice), and have never heard of an SP2 for 2008 R2. There is definitely an SP2 for 2008 (I'm looking at an ISO file with SP2 slipstreamed into it right now), but I don't have an equivalent for 2008 R2. I do have an SP1 for R2, but that's where it ends. A quick google search for 2008 R2 SP2 brings back results for 2008 SP2, but R2 is omitted from the results.
This 2008 R2 lifecycle page mentions SP1, but not SP2.
Do you have a link for that 2008 R2 SP2?
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Running Windows 11 v22H2 just fine on my Dell XPS 15. I also have it on a pair of machines at work, one of which is a Surface Pro 8 and it runs fine. In fact on the Surface Pro 8 it runs better than Windows 10.
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Good for you.
Its working fine for my friend as well. But there are a few people I know at work where there laptops had the same issue as me. So, not so good for the rest of us.
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Generally Windows upgrades are fraught with peril. The reason is the registry collects garbage and sometimes the upgrades fail to install registry entries properly.
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I've used that version without any major problems. But I did a full install though. Learned many years ago to never, ever use an upgraded version of Windows.
Jeremy Falcon
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Super confused by your post. Perhaps I am not reading it correctly.
I have a brand new install of Windows 11 with the computer that I just bought and then as time goes on Microsoft pushes updates and you update your computer.
Are you suggesting I reformat the hard-drive with the latest version of windows every time Microsoft pushes an update? Please tell me you are not recommending this.
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Slacker007 wrote: Are you suggesting I reformat the hard-drive with the latest version of windows every time Microsoft pushes an update? I don't think he is suggesting that...
I think he is suggesting to re-format and re-install every time a new update screws your system
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Ha ha. That works too. lol
Jeremy Falcon
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If your PC has a single hard disk, so all your user files are on the C: disk, then regular re-installation may require too much work to be worthwhile.
I got myself an M.2 system disk (when I bought the MB, M.2 was not widespread, but fortunately the MB has an M.2 socket where I could insert an M.2 last year!) which holds Windows itself, along with supplementary .sys files for paging, hibernation etc. User profiles are of course there, but I have made it a habit to never use 'My xxx' directories. Nor do I put any user data files on my desktop. I set up my Thunderbird profile to sort all incoming mail into various folders on another disk. I keep all my user files on other disks. I consider <userprofile>\Downloads a temporary location, sorting out the downloads to some final destination (on another disk) as soon as possible after downloading.
Some applications insist on storing data in my user profile. In my last job, I was responsible for a developing and maintaining an internal tool, an application installation wizard taking a list of applications to install. I actually use it event to copy all such files to a temporary directory on another disk before reinstalling Windows. After reinstallation, the job list given to the wizard for reinstalling all applications will also copy back these files saved from my user profile. I keep the Windows installer on a USB3 memory stick. All application installers, and the temporary directory for those user profile files to be preserved, are saved on an 'old' 3.5" flash disk.
So I first use the wizard to save those user profile files I have chosen to preserve. Copying the files from an M.2 to a flash disk is a fast operation.
Then comes running the Windows installer from an USB3 memory stick to an M.2, letting the installer reformat C:. On an M.2, that takes some time, not much. There are a few questions to be answered in the beginning of the operation - not that much.
Then I use the wizard to re-install all applications. A few of them cannot be run unattended; they insist on interactive input of a few things such as license codes. I've put those first in the install list, to get all of those done with as soon as possible, before I leave the PC to itself to install all the rest. The last job given to the wizard is a list of .log and .tmp files left by various installers (including the Windows installer), empty the C: recycle bin, and clean various cache files/directories.
After running the reinstallation, I might do a manual Windows Update. The image you download with the 'Media Creation Tool' is at least partially kept updated with these, so every now and then, I refresh my Windows installer memory stick, to reduce the amount of work that Windows Update has to do.
With a setup like mine, refreshing the PC every couple of months certainly is no big hassle. In one sweep, it cleans out a lot of garbage, from temporary files to garbage registry entries to utilities I have installed just to check them out (so they are not in the wizard's install list) to unwanted cookies to whathaveyou. If some malware has come into my machine, it is likely to be wiped out. I think it is a great way of keeping my PC reasonably clean most of the time.
I have had a setup like this since the days when everything was run on magnetic disks. Then it took a lot longer. Of course it has been refined over the years. In the early years, I had not yet discovered the locations of all the setting files of the various applications, so it happened that I had to re-specify my preferences after a cleanup. Nowadays, I believe that I catch it all. I do look over C: before I start reinstallation to see if I have left some files there that should be preserved, but I rarely find anything.
If your configuration resembles mine, with M.2 system disk, installers on USB3 / flash disk, you have a decent application install wizard, and keep all your user data files on other disks, then I would certainly recommend every now and then doing a cleanup like I do. If your PC has a single, magnetic C: disk, you have no USB3 stick for Windows, and you do not have a good application install wizard, then I am not so sure.
(To answer before you ask: Sorry, that wizard I am using is the property of my last employer. It is not available outside the company, so I can not provide it to you.)
Note: My PC is too old to run W11, so I am on W10. I see no reason why my setup could not be ported to W11.
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More or less the same as you but without wizard.
C: System (M.2 gen 4)
D: (min. other partition, better another disk) Data to work with (M2 gen 3)
E: Warehouse (Long time storage) normal HDD high capacity
F: IT Staff (SSD)
Macrium Images every now and then saved in F: (FIFO of 5 last versions) with all installers of software I like / I use
If I have problems I go to the last backup and restore + re-install not permanent software. If still problems, back to an older version.
Every 3 to 5 years a clean install from media tool stick, because there is a point where backups will get crap inside if you wish it or not.
Doing it almost everything manually, I fully restore wihtin 4 hours
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Every time they release a major update. Pretty sure that can be gleaned from the context.
If that’s too much trouble for you then you can automate most things. But there’s no need as a major update is once at year at most. I never upgrade and only have to reinstall every couple years.
You should know this…
Jeremy Falcon
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Major versions require a clean install. Thus, 2000 to XP, XP to Vista, Vista to 7, 7 to 8.x, 8.x to 10, and 10 to 11 should all be clean installs.
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100%... I'd add to that all major versions of 11 as well. Like 22H2 was a big update. But then again, I could be a masochist.
Jeremy Falcon
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And I thought it was just me....
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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Faithless - God Is a DJ[^]
Currently enjoying my two week Christmas break, but a legend passed away last week so I'm coming out of hibernation to pay my due respects.
Maxi Jazz, singer of Faithless, passed away due to illness.
God Is A DJ was my first Faithless song and probably their second most popular song (after Insomnia).
The crowd at Pinkpop 1999 in The Netherlands caused an earthquake when they all jumped to Faithless
Too bad an ex-coworker kind of ruined it for me when he said "This is my church, this is where I hurt my heels."
RIP legend Maxi Jazz.
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yes, sad news about Faithless ... and this is indeed a top track , upvoted ...
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…whilst honeymooning in Australia. Reports say he didn't suffer for too long as he'd only
been married 5 days.
If you can't laugh at yourself - ask me and I will do it for you.
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groan....
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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I was lucky enough to see them before they retired.
A very entertaining night and got to meet them after the show. They were selling their own merchandise and spent ages talking to them.
// TODO: Insert something here Top ten reasons why I'm lazy
1.
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most funny
"A little time, a little trouble, your better day"
Badfinger
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Must. Not. Laugh. (Herelf is sitting beside me)
"I have no idea what I did, but I'm taking full credit for it." - ThisOldTony
"Common sense is so rare these days, it should be classified as a super power" - Random T-shirt
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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Highly recommended reading: Bill Bryson: In a sunburned country[^] (original/UK title: Down Under).
A handful of quotes:
"What about sharks?" I asked uneasily.
"Oh, there's hardly any sharks here. Glenn, how long has it been since someone was killed by a shark?"
"Oh, ages," Glenn said, considering, "Couple of months, at least."
That is what a crocodile attack is like, you see – swift, unexpected, extremely irreversible.
Then, furtively poking about on the bottom was a reef shark – only a couple of feet long but capable of giving you a jolly good nip.
"If you're out in the bush and a snake comes along, just stop dead and let it slide over your shoes."
This, I decided, was the least-likely-to-be-followed advice I had ever been given.
"And what does that mean exactly?"
"Pain beyond description followed shortly by muscular paralysis, respiratory depression, cardiac palpitations and a severe disinclination to boogie."
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He couldn't have been a lawyer - they don't eat their own kind do they? :P
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