All kinds of agreement. The nice thing about Dell is the drivers are easy to 
find and don't usually require extra apps.

Most of my experience is with Dell so maybe I'm biased, but it seems like most 
other vendors are a pain to sort out which files you need to download and which 
are drivers versus crapware.

Sent from my Windows Phone
________________________________
From: Ben Scott<mailto:[email protected]>
Sent: ‎7/‎21/‎2014 7:25 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] Win 8 OEM clean install - media, editions, activation

On Mon, Jul 21, 2014 at 7:12 PM, Dean Cunningham
<[email protected]> wrote:
> I see no reason why , on rebuild (from DVD) , you could not go into audit
> mode, uninstall all the bloatware and trials, sysprep it , and take a copy
> of the disk to use as  master image

  "Uninstalling" software from Windows is difficult[1].  There are
almost always remnants.  Leftover files and registry entries that
don't get removed.  Shared files that get updated or changed.  System
configuration elements which were changed are not restored to
defaults.  Optional components and packages that get installed are not
removed.

  Plus, much of this sort of shovelware doesn't *have* an uninstaller.
Once installed, the only way to remove it is to manually delete
things, often with it actively fighting you.

  And for many OEM-preloaded "Apps" on Windows 8, removing them is a
special kind of h*ll, requiring backdoor hacks and poorly-documented
PowerShell commands to remove them.

  I'm after a clean install, that doesn't have this kind of scar tissue.

-- Ben

[1] And it's not exactly magically easy on most other platforms, either.



Reply via email to