Forum Discussion
jimmyp1975
Sep 27, 2019Copper Contributor
Bypassing Windows 10 Features upgrade procedure's full system backup in Windows.old folder
Hello everyone. This post concerns the Windows Development Team and must be considered as a new Feature Request. How difficult would be to create two options for users that are about to perfo...
HotCakeX
Oct 05, 2019MVP
Hi,
as someone who does in-place upgrades/upgrades/clean installs/Reinstalls etc very frequently, at some points I felt the need for such option as well.
then I thought about this Fact:
there is Already an option, if you choose to remove everything during an in-place upgrade, the Windows.old folder will be a lot smaller and only contain "users" folder from the old installation.
I think, they didn't add that option because when someone chooses to do in-place upgrade and also chooses to keep apps and files, then having the Full Windows.old folder would help them if anything goes wrong.
and things Can go wrong, one of the hundreds of examples would be when a user is doing an in-place upgrade, chooses to keep his/her files and apps and during the installation a power outage occurs, or a hardware malfunctions or anything else, literally. in that case, the same user who Trusted Microsoft to keep his/her files and apps safe, would lose his/her data, and then blame who? the electrical company? nope, they will blame Microsoft.
Another thing,
it does Not cause any problems or slow downs on SSD disks and they are Quite popular and used these days, they have been around for more than 10 years now.
the more we go into the future and the more time passes, more people start using SSDs everyday.
as someone who does in-place upgrades/upgrades/clean installs/Reinstalls etc very frequently, at some points I felt the need for such option as well.
then I thought about this Fact:
there is Already an option, if you choose to remove everything during an in-place upgrade, the Windows.old folder will be a lot smaller and only contain "users" folder from the old installation.
I think, they didn't add that option because when someone chooses to do in-place upgrade and also chooses to keep apps and files, then having the Full Windows.old folder would help them if anything goes wrong.
and things Can go wrong, one of the hundreds of examples would be when a user is doing an in-place upgrade, chooses to keep his/her files and apps and during the installation a power outage occurs, or a hardware malfunctions or anything else, literally. in that case, the same user who Trusted Microsoft to keep his/her files and apps safe, would lose his/her data, and then blame who? the electrical company? nope, they will blame Microsoft.
Another thing,
it does Not cause any problems or slow downs on SSD disks and they are Quite popular and used these days, they have been around for more than 10 years now.
the more we go into the future and the more time passes, more people start using SSDs everyday.
jimmyp1975
Oct 07, 2019Copper Contributor
Hello.
The point of my suggestion is to give the freedom to the users to choose ( for all the reasons i explained in detail in my original post ) what's best for them taking of course into account whatever risks their chosen option implies and it does not concern the speed of the hardware Windows run on. All is about is bypassing unnecessary time wasted for backups already taken by end users as full system images (externally or internally) prior of upgrading Windows.
Thank you very much.
- HotCakeXOct 07, 2019MVPYou're welcome,
it's okay, I just explained it from a different perspective,
ultimately it's up to the developers to receive all the feedbacks and decide whether or not to implement a feature 🙂