Microsoft — January 7, 2012 12:25

Windows 8: Refresh and Reset your PC

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As we getting closer to Windows 8 release, more and more tips and tricks are coming into play. This time, we are happy to introduce you to a new Windows feature called Refresh.  Instead of formating your PC and installing a new Windows installation afresh, now you can simply refresh the operating system. To put it in simple words, by refreshing your PC you restore it back to factory defaults, without losing data or any configuration. Well, this sounds very good especially if you work at a service department, but we would like to see it in action.

Two solutions for Windows 8 troubleshooting:

  • Reset your PC – Remove all personal data, apps, and settings from the PC, and reinstall Windows.
  • Refresh your PC – Keep all personal data, Metro style apps, and important settings from the PC, and reinstall Windows.

 

Below you’ll find the PR from MSDN blog:

Today, there are many different approaches and tools to get a PC back to factory condition. If you buy a PC with Windows preinstalled, it often comes with a manufacturer-provided tool and a hidden partition that can be used for that specific model of PC. You might also use a third-party imaging product, Windows system image backup, or the tried and true method of a clean reinstall from the Windows DVD. While these tools all provide similar functionalities, they don’t provide a consistent experience from one PC or technique to another. If you are the “go to” person for your friends, relatives, or neighbors when they need help with their PCs, you may find that it’s sometimes necessary to just start over and reinstall everything. Without a consistent experience to do this, you might end up spending more time finding the recovery tool for a specific PC than actually fixing the problems, and this gets even worse if you’re helping someone over the phone.

With Windows 8, there are a few key things that we set out to deliver:

  • Provide a consistent experience to get the software on any Windows 8 PC back to a good and predictable state.
  • Streamline the process so that getting a PC back to a good state with all the things customers care about can be done quickly instead of taking up the whole day.
  • Make sure that customers don’t lose their data in the process.
  • Provide a fully customizable approach for technical enthusiasts to do things their own way.

As we began planning for Windows 8, we asked ourselves: “Wouldn’t it be great if you could just push a button and everything is fixed?” We really wanted to focus on the concept of “push button”, which translated into a design goal that represents a simple to use, predictable, and fast solution. We also wanted to build on the process many people already use today when they need to start over: back up your data, reinstall Windows and apps, and restore your data. The strength of this approach is that you start over from a truly clean state, but you still get to keep the things you care about. With that as the basis of the solution, our goal was to make the process much more streamlined, less time-consuming, and more accessible to a broad set of customers.

 

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  • John skoteiniwtis

    Sorry but,Windows article on an OS site?seriously?

    • Chris K

      Operating Systems Arena.org
      not Open Source Arena.net.

      • John skoteiniwtis

        No,it is an Open Source arena.org
        See http://osarena.org/about-us/
        Also if you are greek http://osarena.net/about
        In the second link the identity of the site is in bold.

        • Chris K

          I told you what it’s meant to be.

          • John skoteiniwtis

            Are you kidding me?Am i blind? Or you use sarcasm and i didn’t understand it?

          • Chris K

            You are not blind but see the categories in each site.

          • John skoteiniwtis

            I saw them,there are 3 articles about MS,2 of them are sarcastic so they fit into a Open source community.
            But this one is non-sense.
            I thought this was an Open source community.
            I hope this was just a mistake.
            Changing the intentity of a site i loved makes me really unhappy.

          • http://www.osarena.org/ Panos Georgiadis

            OSArena.org editors are all of them linux users. As can you see, our main core is about Linux and Open Source. But, people should be up to date for the upcoming technologies, no matter linux or not. This means you gonna see Windows and Apple articles as well.

          • John skoteiniwtis

            Be sure,if i wanted to learn news about Windows or Apple (besides sarcastic news) i wouldn’t be here.

      • http://profiles.google.com/1lj4z1 donald iljazi

        You are wrong… it’s Open Source Arena…

  • http://www.osarena.org/ Panos Georgiadis

    People should be informed and that’s our job here. After all you know what they say… Keep your friends close and your enemy closer. 

  • Hakim Amamou

    Brilliant

  • Dstilio

    [sarcasm] I am now persuaded to switch back to Windows. [end of sarcasm]

    I believe that John is right. If you cannot see that it is OK. You can have your view and opinion. But please do not try to argue more on this.
    I personally provide the links of OSarena to friends that want to meet Linux but do not have the knowledge to judge some things yet on this area. I really do not understand how to promote the ideas of Linux to non-geeks if you start presenting here articles for Windows and Apple. I think this will be an obstacle for me trying to persuade other people.
    Anyway, you are one of the authors, you are free to write, but I really believe you should re-discuss this with the whole team since there are objections on this issue.
    But please do not blame and try to argue with other people for what they say at their comments. After all a site that is supposed to be focused on Open Source will gather a lot of activists that hate Corporates like Microsoft and Apple!

    P.S. other sites that OSarena editors blamed that do not offer objective information as they seem to promote the Ubuntu from Canonical without judging it…at least do NOT write articles promoting Apple or Microsoft! (Because presenting equals to promoting in the marketing world).
    It is better to promote something open-source without criticizing it instead of claiming that you are objective and presenting the “sharks”.

    At least that is my opinion.
    Thank you,
    Dimitris (writing as dstilio in OSarena.net and Osarena.org).