When I first started it up it was 170gb is there anyway to get it to at least 200? And what can I get rid of on an HP laptop that won’t screw it up?

  • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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    15 minutes ago

    suppose

    supposed

    its

    it’s

    170gb[.] [I]s there anyway

    any way

    I recommend swapping in a new SSD . Use something like clonezilla to mirror the SSD from the old one to the new.

    Also see whether you can bump the RAM in that box: laptops often have a LOT of junk that starts on boot that just seems to eat RAM, not the least of which is Windows itself. Adding RAM will have the most immediate effect once you’ve found the space to install things.

  • michael_palmer@lemmy.sdf.org
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    2 hours ago

    Reinstall Windows and then debloat it. Here’s a guide from AtlasOS. I recommend it to all my friends who have just bought a new laptop. I have no complaints from them. Windows Updates, Defender, Microsoft Store work as expected.

  • teije9@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    5 hours ago

    hp is notorious for pre installing apps that you dont need, it’s called bloatware. you can maybe remove some of those.

    • anothermember@lemmy.zip
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      35 minutes ago

      Golden rule is to never use a computer with the OS that was preloaded. You’ll never know what they put in there.

  • BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world
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    10 hours ago

    The hard drive may be 256gb but a big chunk of that is taken up by Windows and also there will be a hidden recovery partition. So 170gb sounds about right. You can’t reduce how much space windows takes, and the recovery partition is worth keeping in case you get in to trouble.

    There may be programs HP have installed that you can remove in add/remove software to make a bit more space. HP is notorious for bliatware - installing things to try and sell you stuff. Probably a good few gb may be that crap.

    If you download a big game, then it’s not a big deal if you’re using that game. 80gb is still plenty. And you can delete the game when you’re done and use that 90gb for something else.

    256gb isn’t much but it’s enough unless you want multiple big games installed or have a big library of data such as movies or pictures.

    Also it may be possible to upgrade the hard drive - depends on the model and how accessible the hard drive is. If you can access the hard drive to replace it then you could get a 1tb drive for example. There are guides online but basically you’d need to copy the existing drive to the new drive (would need a USB adaptor to mount the new drive first) and then swap the drives round. It very much depends on the laptop though.

    Another option is an external hard drive connected via USB - it’s not good for gaming or running big programmes but it is fine for storing movies and pictures.

    If the priority is to have multiple different big games installed at the same time, then upgrade the hard drive. Most HP models it’s generally doable without much fuss. More difficult with the ultra slim devices though. Search for your model online and see what people have done.

  • 🧟‍♂️ Cadaver@lemmy.world
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    14 hours ago

    If you downloaded the game illegally then installed it on your hard drive then… You have your answer.

    You might still have the downloaded game and you have the installed game. Depending on the fiability of your download source there might also be temporary install file, somewhere.

    • teft@lemmy.world
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      9 hours ago

      Could be on there up to three times. Once as the downloaded archive, once as the expanded archive, and once as the installed game.

  • Bezier@suppo.fi
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    24 hours ago

    Ram and (ssd) storage are two different things. Storage space is the one relevant to this question. Also, both of those numbers, 8 gb of ram and 256 gb of disk space, are very low these days.

    If you’re using the laptop with the software it came with, it might have a bunch of demo versions of useless apps as advertisements. HP is (or at least used to be) notorious for this crap. Somewhere in the settings should be an apps page that lists what’s installed, check there.

    • yeehaw@lemmy.ca
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      15 hours ago

      256 is absolutely fine unless you work with video editing or games. If you’re just growing the net it’ll last you forever.

  • Rentlar@lemmy.ca
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    18 hours ago

    Clean install without the HP bloat, backup the important stuff elsewhere first.

    Another thing: Are you subscribed to a bajillion mods? That is the case for me. My CoD Black Ops 3 is 30GB, with DLC is 90GB, after Steam workshop mods is 377 GB.

    • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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      12 hours ago

      Providing it’s not soldered to the motherboard like Apple does with no way to add more.

  • Maestro@fedia.io
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    22 hours ago

    Lots of people commenting about the laptop here, so let me offer something different. What’s that one game you downloaded? Because if it is Ark: Survival Evolved (or Ascended) then still having 80G left is pretty good!

  • recreationalcatheter@lemm.ee
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    10 hours ago

    Try a Linux install of something lightweight like mint/xfce to eliminate OS bloat.

    Steam has a built in compatibility layer you can manage from your library page, so if your laptop could run a game on windows it should easily run it on mint with the spared resources and you’ll have all that spare space from ditching windows crap.

    • BoxOfFeet@lemmy.world
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      7 hours ago

      Guy is asking if he can download free software to get more ssd space. And while TECHNICALLY Linux does fit the bill for this (and is awesome), I’m willing to wager OP does not have the technical skill set for it at this time.

        • BoxOfFeet@lemmy.world
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          57 minutes ago

          Oh yeah, I don’t think he’s going to be doing that either. I think this is plain old uninstalling pre-installed HP stuff and hoping for the best kind of situation.

          Mint is definitely at LEAST as easy to install as Windows, if not easier. As long as all the stuff on his laptop is supported out of the box. I love my Mint install, but last month I spent 40 minutes on github trying to find the right release of the open driver to work with my revision of network adapter, and the amount of work in the terminal was undoubtedly more than somebody asking this question would be comfortable with.

      • chunkystyles
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        6 hours ago

        It’s funny the biases that crop up in these threads. Another poster says to format the drive and reinstall windows with de-bloating software and that gets upvoted while probably being a more complex process than installing Linux.

        • BoxOfFeet@lemmy.world
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          1 hour ago

          Yeah, I’d say that is too complex as well. I kinda think his best bet is uninstalling whatever HP crap he can, and just hope for the best.

  • Carnelian@lemmy.world
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    24 hours ago

    Probably just a lot of bloatware. When I’ve been in this situation in the past, I did a completely fresh install of windows. Much smaller. Linux can free up even more space.

    There really isn’t anything necessary from HP, but it also depends a lot on your comfort working with the computer so ymmv. I don’t know what’s gonna happen if 3 months down the line you need to call customer support for something. If it were me, I’d be thinking “worst case scenario I can just factory reset”, especially if I had everything important backed up somewhere.

    • adarza@lemmy.ca
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      23 hours ago

      so long as it’s under warranty. yea. make sure you have a way to actually do the ‘factory reset’.

      if you nix the partitions during a ‘clean install’ of windows or of linux, you won’t.

      unless you’ve made a backup image of the hdd to an external (using reflect or similar), or in hp’s case–download their recovery media creator (runs on windows only but doesn’t have to be the target system) and build a recovery flash drive for your model.