But the same applies to Vista, XP, 2000, and any other preloaded OS, for as long as I can remember -- you get a new PC with an OS and a mysterious collection of changes to that OS -- it just seems "get a clean OS" should be an option.

With Vista, I think there was some trick with getting a cheap Vista upgrade disc, and using that to perform a clean install -- is there a similar trick with Win7?

Thanks!



Not I.  I'm staying away from w7 till the first service pack comes out.

--STeve Andre'

On Saturday 03 April 2010 15:30:28 Scott Matthews wrote:
Do you (or anybody else here) happen to know what comes on a Win7 Thinkpad,
in addition to Win7?

ie, is there a doc up on the Lenovo site that checklists how it differs
from a clean install? It seems rather screwy that something as fundamental
as this is always so obfuscated, why can't "clean Win7" be a preload
option? Now THAT would be useful on a restore partition.




--------------------------------------------------
From: "STeve Andre'" <and...@msu.edu>
Sent: Saturday, April 03, 2010 2:20 PM
To: <thinkpad@stderr.org>
Cc: "Scott Matthews" <sc...@turnstyle.com>
Subject: Re: [Thinkpad] Question about getting a new Thinkpad...

> On Saturday 03 April 2010 08:51:26 Scott Matthews wrote:
>> In the past, whenever I purchased a new PC I would always wipe it and
>> perform a clean install -- as the manufacturers would always preload
>> various undesirable apps and other useless stuff.
>>
>> Am I correct to assume that a new Thinkpad (Win 7) will similarly come
>> with
>> this sort of stuff?
>>
>> If so, is there a "best" way to purchase a Thinkpad, presumably with >> Win
>> 7,
>> and then perform a clean install?
>>
>> Thanks kindly,  -Scott
>
> Everyone installs trash on their systems these days, it seems.  If you
> run to
> the patch site and add stuff, then delete the crud you don't want, I
> don't see
> a need to scrub the system.    You'll have to do that soon enough after
> you
> get infected. ;-)
>
> The restore partition will reinstall all the crud, so perhaps a > checklist
> of
> things that want to be removed is a good idea. I hadn't thought of > that.
>
> In some cases it seems to be possible to buy a thinkpad with just dos > on
> it, at some savings.  You could then get a copy of W7 and install that,
> but
> that costs more and I don't think its worth it--at least I've not seen > a
> compelling reason for that.
>
> --STeve Andre'

_______________________________________________
Thinkpad mailing list
Thinkpad@stderr.org
http://stderr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/thinkpad


_______________________________________________
Thinkpad mailing list
Thinkpad@stderr.org
http://stderr.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/thinkpad

Reply via email to