- May 12, 2004
- 357
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In various discussion forums, I have seen people recommend using "driver cleaner" to completely wipe any remnants of the old driver prior to installing a new one.
I have never done this, but have installed countless versions of nVidia drivers, dating back to Windows NT4. I have downgraded, upgraded and sidegraded. No issues. No use for any "cleaners".
So I am curious: In which cases does the driver cleaner help? Upgrading the drivers will hopefully replace all relevant files (downgrading will ask to replace newer files, so if you answer "no" you will naturally have issues). One problem, I guess, is that the meaning of certain settings may change. But that would be a pretty stupid design decision on the driver vendor's part. (I do recall some artifacts at one point with video overlays, but that was a couple of years ago and not critical)
Another potential problem is stupid installers. The proper way to install a driver is by using Device Mgr, yet almost all hardware OEMs pushes an ugly looking installer onto the unsuspecting public. (and many of the installers cover the entire screen! as if I don't want to do other stuff while running a one minute installer!) Some of these installers do not look foolproof to me.
But back to my question: Has it ever helped? And how come? ("voodoo"?)
I have never done this, but have installed countless versions of nVidia drivers, dating back to Windows NT4. I have downgraded, upgraded and sidegraded. No issues. No use for any "cleaners".
So I am curious: In which cases does the driver cleaner help? Upgrading the drivers will hopefully replace all relevant files (downgrading will ask to replace newer files, so if you answer "no" you will naturally have issues). One problem, I guess, is that the meaning of certain settings may change. But that would be a pretty stupid design decision on the driver vendor's part. (I do recall some artifacts at one point with video overlays, but that was a couple of years ago and not critical)
Another potential problem is stupid installers. The proper way to install a driver is by using Device Mgr, yet almost all hardware OEMs pushes an ugly looking installer onto the unsuspecting public. (and many of the installers cover the entire screen! as if I don't want to do other stuff while running a one minute installer!) Some of these installers do not look foolproof to me.
But back to my question: Has it ever helped? And how come? ("voodoo"?)