Thanks, I may give that method a shot on this PC next time I
reformat.
-Clint


----- Original Message -----
From: "Keith Thompson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

First off, the registry is stored in the Windows folder,
hidden and
system, so that if the Windows folder is deleted, the
registry is gone
as well.  As for the Programs folder, I've never taken that
out, but
have had on occasion, a second copy generated (I believe that
was with
Win 95).  I have removed the Windows and its subfolders on
several
occasions using the Deltree.exe command. By doing this, I
have stripped
out the full windows system and now have a clean folder (will
generate a
new upon installation) for the new install of windows.  The
data for the
other folders is there as are the programs.  Many of these
will have to
be reinstalled to restore the dlls and other system files
that were in
Windows\System.  I do store a backup copy of all my dlls in
another
folder using a little utility that will scan the disk and put
copies of
all the dlls in another folder.  If you are worried about the
autoexec
and config.sys files, these are in the C: root folder and can
easily be
remove while in dos mode from a boot floppy.

Keith Thompson

"OrpheusComputing.com" wrote:
>
> If you delete the windows and programs files folders,
you're
> still going to have things on the HD that do not belong
> there, and the registry will still be as it was.  Is there
a
> way to delete an entire registry?  (I've never tried it).
IF
> so, this may be an option.  However, since windows has to
be
> installed again anyway, plus all the programs, OS and IE
> updates, etc., again, reformatting first would not take any
> more time...well, maybe 30 seconds longer.  I Personally
(and
> for our customers' sake that need to upgrade a mobo) would
> rather have a flawless stable system on a fresh format.
But
> if it works for you, good.  :)  I just wouldn't trust it.
> -Clint
>

> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "graham nimmo" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>
> "OrpheusComputing.com" wrote:
> >
> > I think I already said why:
>
> sorry must have missed that bit
>
> > You should always reformat when
> > > > changing a motherboard, no two boards are the same.
> The
> > old
> > > > board will leave countless 'things' in the extended
> > device
> > > > manager, not to mention all the orphaned drivers
files.
> > > > These things can severely conflict with a new board.
> >
> > Not to mention the "derelicts" left over in the registry.
> > Not starting over is just asking for
> problems......conflicts,
> > yellow marks in the device manager, IRQ conflicts,
errors,
> > instability, etc.
> >
> > Important programs and files should be backed up
regularly
> > anyway.  In the long run it's actually faster to just
> > reformat, than to have to deal with and try and figure
out
> &
> > fix, errors, instability, and all the conflicts that
> > *usually* arise.
>
> The Windows and Program Files folders ARE the registry.
Only
> these 2
> folders need to be deleted. Formatting is overkill.
>
> In my experience reformatting is generally seen as a
panacea
> for corrupt
> drivers, and is often performed repeatedly when things go
> wrong. Sure if
> you repeatedly install and uninstall programs you may screw
> things up
> but see above (or restore from a registry save) - there is
no
> NEED to
> reformat.
>
> --
> Graham
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