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How often do you nuke your OS installations?
Posted: 2005-08-03 03:36pm
by Pu-239
For me back when I used Windows as a primary OS on a PII-266, basically any time there's a single trace of spyware, to ensure it gets completely removed, with everything backed up to a second partition or CDRs- saved me the trouble of having to run spyware removal programs and antivirus on a really slow computer Nowadays, I don't use Windows for anything that can get it infected in the first place, so any reinstallation is usually due to something stupid being done or reconfiguration of partition setup.
Linux, I've nuked it at least twice due to the filesystem being trashed- first when I yanked the power cord (XFS doesn't seem that robust) due to the inability to wait for a proper shutdown and the other incident was on the server when too much RAM was added to a sh*tty Dell, which caused memory errors which again trashed the filesystem. Filesystem was probably recoverable, but I thought it was beyond repair due to fsck failing due to trashed RAM.
Posted: 2005-08-03 03:46pm
by Dahak
I only re-install Windows if I absolutely have to, i.e. complete system crash.It's just too much hassle to do it more often...
Posted: 2005-08-03 03:53pm
by Comosicus
I have more than 6 months since I've reinstalled XP on my machine and that was because I got a bigger hdd. When I had 98, it usually lasted less than 3-4 months.
Posted: 2005-08-03 03:57pm
by Tiger Ace
Hmn...last time I re-installed was 2003, it was a good install and I've kept the PC regularly maintained.
Posted: 2005-08-03 04:01pm
by InnocentBystander
I've gone two years without needing to frag the HD, longest I've ever gone a a computer. Just goes to show, windows is getting better, ever so slowly.
Posted: 2005-08-03 04:04pm
by Tiger Ace
Esspecially if you properly maintain it.
Posted: 2005-08-03 04:07pm
by DrkHelmet
It depends. I always try to set it up so that I never have to nuke the OS again, but it never seems to work. When I obtained my first computer, I nuked the OS 6 times in 2 months. I seem to be setting it up better each time. I am now reinstalling about once per year.
Posted: 2005-08-03 04:12pm
by gizmojumpjet
I generally replace or heavily upgrade my machine about every 18 months or so, and always do a fresh install at that time.
It's cleansing, like an enema. I'm working on a way to turn it into a drinking game...
Posted: 2005-08-03 04:22pm
by InnocentBystander
gizmojumpjet wrote:It's cleansing, like an enema. I'm working on a way to turn it into a drinking game...
Take a shot every time you get a rectal exam? Sounds fun!
Posted: 2005-08-03 04:53pm
by Ubiquitous
I guess I could do with a clean install of XP. But the amount of shit I have downloaded that I can't now live without would leave me having to download for weeks to simply get back to where I am now. Think I will stay with the slowness of my system for the sake of my sanity.
Posted: 2005-08-03 05:04pm
by Alyeska
Every 6-18 months (running Win XP Professional) depending on circumstances.
Posted: 2005-08-03 05:08pm
by Darth Wong
For Windows, I tend to wait until concrete problems arise, because it takes so goddamned long to configure a Windows box, install all of the software, etc.
For Linux, I tend to install every new version that comes out, because it's got newer stuff, better features, etc. And it's no small advantage that I don't lose my desktop configuration because the /home directory is on a separate partition and doesn't get reformatted.
Posted: 2005-08-03 05:26pm
by Alyeska
Yeah, as Mike said, I only reinstall when problems arrise. Usualy I can manage over a year without any real incidents, but from time to time something crops up sooner.
Posted: 2005-08-03 05:31pm
by The Dark
I'm averaging about two years between nukes. However, one was due to a software/hardware hatred (which was ironic considering it was a Microsoft program that caused it). The other was a general systems crash. Not bad for a computer running ME and not consistently defragged.
Posted: 2005-08-03 05:32pm
by Pu-239
Darth Wong wrote:For Windows, I tend to wait until concrete problems arise, because it takes so goddamned long to configure a Windows box, install all of the software, etc.
For Linux, I tend to install every new version that comes out, because it's got newer stuff, better features, etc. And it's no small advantage that I don't lose my desktop configuration because the /home directory is on a separate partition and doesn't get reformatted.
With Debian, you don't have to reinstall to upgrade
.
Posted: 2005-08-03 05:34pm
by Darth Wong
Pu-239 wrote:Darth Wong wrote:For Windows, I tend to wait until concrete problems arise, because it takes so goddamned long to configure a Windows box, install all of the software, etc.
For Linux, I tend to install every new version that comes out, because it's got newer stuff, better features, etc. And it's no small advantage that I don't lose my desktop configuration because the /home directory is on a separate partition and doesn't get reformatted.
With Debian, you don't have to reinstall to upgrade
.
You can do that with Mandriva too, but I generally prefer to reformat the non-home partitions anyway, just because I always suspect that it will be cleaner and there's no real loss in functionality (not like reinstalling Windows, where it feels like you're dealing with a newborn baby and have to teach it how to function without shitting itself).
Posted: 2005-08-03 06:00pm
by Enigma
I reinstall WinMe every 18 months because that is how long it takes before it becomes unusable. On Monday I formatted the computer and reinstalled ME twice because for some reason ME hates ATI drivers. After this post I'll be wiping my computer clean again hoping to try and fix the problem. I can't wait to get my copy of XP.
Posted: 2005-08-03 06:08pm
by Chmee
I've had pretty good luck with XP Pro since re-installing over a year ago. Since I moved all the web stuff to my Win2K webserver, partitioned the drives out so that all the business/Internet apps are on one drive, all the games on another, and all the music-media files on the server, performance has seemed nice and steady as long as I do all the routine housekeeping on a regular basis.
Posted: 2005-08-03 07:11pm
by Graeme Dice
I've never re-installed, and have had no problems despite the fact that my Win98 machine has been running for about 5 years now.
Posted: 2005-08-03 08:00pm
by Uraniun235
Very rarely. I think the last two times I've done it were purely because I had changed the motherboard, and to try and make the current Win2K installation play nice with a new motherboard (while possible) would be a much bigger pain in the ass than it's worth; it's simply much easier at that point to reinstall.
Posted: 2005-08-03 08:05pm
by Hamel
The last time I reinstalled XP, it was part of an effort to track down what was causing video-related crashes. Something else was the problem, though I never figured out what it was. I think I could go over a year without needing to, as I keep good care of things.
Posted: 2005-08-03 11:53pm
by Xon
Generally every major upgrade(aka changing the motherboard and everything else), so about 3-4 years.
Suprisingly, when doing some backup work I plugged the harddrive from my brother's computer which featured completely hardware(the only thing which was common was the CPU brand, made by AMD) and the damn thing booted properly and started auto-detecting all the hardware correctly.
It generally takes me an hour or 2 to configure a Windows box to how I like it, biggest time consuming bit is installing VS.NET 2003 pro(legal too!). I want to hit the moron which though 4gb of small files was a good idea to put on 3-4 CDs/1 DVD.
Posted: 2005-08-04 12:50am
by Uraniun235
Oh, that reminds me, next time I reinstall and get most everything configured right, I plan on taking my computer into work and using Norton Ghost to make an image of the system partition - that way if Windows ever goes tits-up on me I can just load the image (which I'll have since burned to a DVD-R) and be up and running with minimal effort.
Posted: 2005-08-04 08:59am
by Master of Cards
a week to a month or 2
Posted: 2005-08-04 09:04am
by Bounty
Two years and counting, with Win XP Pro. It's been solid as a rock so far, except for the odd driver meltdown.