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| Thread ID: 123650 | 2012-03-08 19:35:00 | Do I need ALL this stuff? | Tony (4941) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 1263863 | 2012-03-08 19:35:00 | See the snip that shows all the bits of Microsoft C++ Redistributable. I can't believe I need all of these. How do I decide what bits I can uninstall? | Tony (4941) | ||
| 1263864 | 2012-03-08 19:40:00 | If you've got programs that needs those, then yes you need them | Speedy Gonzales (78) | ||
| 1263865 | 2012-03-08 19:45:00 | I have 9 entries for C++. :) |
Trev (427) | ||
| 1263866 | 2012-03-08 19:45:00 | Well, yes I understand that as a general principle, but that list looks to me like a series of cumulative updates, which made me think that maybe I could get rid of the earlier ones - is that not true? | Tony (4941) | ||
| 1263867 | 2012-03-08 19:59:00 | Just a question here for those who no. Does Windows Update gets rid of old updates when it is intalling newer versions of a particular update. :) |
Trev (427) | ||
| 1263868 | 2012-03-08 21:33:00 | That's actually about the core of my question. I was speculating that maybe it doesn't. | Tony (4941) | ||
| 1263869 | 2012-03-08 23:26:00 | Does Windows Update gets rid of old updates when it is intalling newer versions of a particular update. :) No. Bloat accumulates. Which is why SPs are better. |
pctek (84) | ||
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