"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
^^^ What he said. Bite the bullet. Document all the running aps and reinstall fresh for less headaches. I've had to do it many times. Not just Win updates, but new PC builds several times. Your problem is not really a Windows limitation, but what the Windows image knows (or thinks it knows from the old PC image) is the motherboard, CPU, hardware components, drivers, etc. etc. etc. Yea, it does try to resolve them and generally does a pretty good job, but you will likely find little things that will drive you nuts. Like not able to print to a printer cuz Win says you have the latest drivers, won't let you update them, and won't let you print.
Quote from: screenxpress on March 21, 2017, 02:56:25 AM^^^ What he said. Bite the bullet. Document all the running aps and reinstall fresh for less headaches. I've had to do it many times. Not just Win updates, but new PC builds several times. Your problem is not really a Windows limitation, but what the Windows image knows (or thinks it knows from the old PC image) is the motherboard, CPU, hardware components, drivers, etc. etc. etc. Yea, it does try to resolve them and generally does a pretty good job, but you will likely find little things that will drive you nuts. Like not able to print to a printer cuz Win says you have the latest drivers, won't let you update them, and won't let you print.Wondering if folks who do experience these problems could, or should at least try a Windows repair with the original disk.Or, better yet, can one clone a C drive to keep all of one's applications, but still re-install the full Windows OS?
Quote from: Frog on March 21, 2017, 08:48:47 AMQuote from: screenxpress on March 21, 2017, 02:56:25 AM^^^ What he said. Bite the bullet. Document all the running aps and reinstall fresh for less headaches. I've had to do it many times. Not just Win updates, but new PC builds several times. Your problem is not really a Windows limitation, but what the Windows image knows (or thinks it knows from the old PC image) is the motherboard, CPU, hardware components, drivers, etc. etc. etc. Yea, it does try to resolve them and generally does a pretty good job, but you will likely find little things that will drive you nuts. Like not able to print to a printer cuz Win says you have the latest drivers, won't let you update them, and won't let you print.Wondering if folks who do experience these problems could, or should at least try a Windows repair with the original disk.Or, better yet, can one clone a C drive to keep all of one's applications, but still re-install the full Windows OS?Andy, I don't think so as I believe Windows has it's fingers in things even when aps are installed, but there are folks on the board here that are sharper than me on Windows nuances and I'll defer to one of them to respond and educate us.