johngorno New User

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  • Thanks for the explanation! I really appreciate the effort you regulars put in to helping here! So, the Recovery Image is a disk image duplicate of the main (OS) partition when it shipped from Acer? And that's why it's so big. If one's upgraded from Win 8.1 to Win 10, is there any way to create an Acer recovery disk that…
  • I was wondering if that might be the case... so, you're saying that the 7 GB partition (6 GB used) was left over from making my Recovery disk... how sure are you? The Recovery disk itself only uses 3 GB... The partition is named "Images" and its type is listed as GPT Recovery Partition -- there's also another,…
  • I think I have the same computer, and as IronFly said, one (unfortunately!) can't upgrade the internal 32 GB Solid State Drive which Windows runs on (and opening the unit voids the warranty anyway). The hidden recovery partitions on it can be pretty big -- I have a 7 GB one on my SSD, and the total size left for the…
  • I should have said this: make a permanant, dedicated Windows Recovery USB drive before messing with the partitions! JF
  • I have the same situation on my Acer: on a 32 GB drive, only 22 GB is visible, and most is filled up by the operating system (only 4 GB free, not enough free to update Windows in the normal manner). This is typical of these Windows installations -- 32 GB isn't really enough. The missing disk memory is in hidden recovery…
  • Just to explain why this didn't work, USB ports weren't originally intended for connections between computers (peer-to-peer), so those connections aren't recognized the way connections to peripherals like iPads, printers, etc., are. The simple solution to transfer media files like you're doing is to use external memory:…
  • If anyone is wondering, the update didn't have any noticeable effect, so I don't know if it's worth bothering with; I was hoping it might have fixed some of the obvious flaws of Windows 10 (unresponsive task bar, etc., etc.). Here's how I got around the space problem this time, using free software from CNET. I don't know…
  • (Thanks for the tablet chassis opening instructions!) Your memory is correct: the only thing that could be an SSD (or its housing?) appears to be built in (and a non-rectangle). I'm not brave enough to mess with it to see if there's a replaceable SSD hiding inside (not that anyone should have to go to that extreme to keep…
  • Thanks, the screws were hidden under those four sticky pads (which are a pain to remove without scratching the chassis). I've been paranoid about using it unplugged because I didn't know how to get in to replace the battery: now I'm freeeee! JF
  • A necessary question... no, I deleted Windows.old before trying. There is a 7 GB recovery partition, though. (I broke down and went through the risk/trouble of backing that up, then deleting it and moving/resizing the remaining partitions to permit the install, then restoring that partition, but it would be nice if there…
  • Are they hidden under the four little silver squares that bracket the two hinge sockets? This is what the bottom edge looks like, with those squares marked with ?'s: JF
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