Rogkam wrote:
thank you hmscott. once i deleted the F: partition i used a program called Partition Wizard to extend my C drive!
another question :
- would you recommend I do a clean install of my computer rather than using all of ASUS's bloatware?
- would it run significantly faster?
Rogkam, when people say Clean Install, it can have a couple of meanings.
A restore recovery clean install of the Asus OEM recovery via F9 HD or Asus Backtracker gives you a "Clean" install of the original Asus OEM configuration that came out of the box.
The other "Clean Install" is to do a Microsoft Windows install from vanilla Windows. Common on desktops, but much more difficult on laptops - it is better to use the manufacturers OEM install and remove what you don't want.
In short, it is a waste of time to do a Microsoft Windows Clean install from vanilla Windows; there is no performance benefit, and it is hours of time wasted recreating the work Asus put in building the G750 OS build.
You need to spend time finding and downloading all the latest drivers - Asus doesn't keep them all online in the same place - you have to go to a number of places other than the specific laptop download area to find them. The first time you do it you will miss something, and even if you follow instructions from someone else - it is a long and futile exercise with no benefit, again, all benchmark results are the same.
If you do decide to do a Microsoft vanilla Windows clean install, be sure and do an Asus Backtracker backup of the recovery partition to a fast USB 3.0 flash drive (16GB or larger), so you can recover back to Asus OEM config if desired.
And, copy the C:\eSupport folder with apps/drivers/docs to that or another flash drive.
You can also clone the original drive to a new drive and work on the copy, saving the original drive on the shelf as a backup - drives are cheap today - this is my preferred route.
What I suggest is to use the Asus OEM OS build, and uninstall the Asus stuff you don't want because it doesn't improve anything, or makes it worse, or doesn't do something you need. There really is pnly one actual piece of Asus bloatware, and it is easy to uninstall.
Here is what I uninstall:
1) Asus Splendid - ruins color correction, doesn't allow fine user control of color correction, options aren't pleasing.
2) Asus Power4Gear - same power plans as Windows Power Plans, but auto-changes the plan based on AC/Battery, and doesn't allow you to force a non-Asus power plan - it keeps changing it back.
3) Asus DVD - I have my own Cyberlink PowerDVD Ultra 14 license, so I don't need the Asus version installed - I would keep it if I didn't have my own license
4) Asus ROG Gaming Mouse - causes some to get crashes - most don't have an ROG mouse, I don't, so I uninstall.
5) Cyberlink Power2Go - I don't use this, so I uninstall it.
6) AsusVibe 2.0 - the only true "bloatware" it is the Asus media store app, you might want to check this out before uninstalling
🙂You can use the Asus Install program to reinstall what you uninstall, and update when updates come through over the tool - I usually don't wait for the tool updates - I go directly to the download areas for the newest versions of my laptop family, in this case the G750JM/JS/JZ.
Let us know what you decide to do, and how it works out for you
🙂