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Click the “System Restore” button - now no longer grayed out, assuming you enabled System Restore - and you can use System Restore to go back to a previous restore point. To use System Restore in the future, just go back to the same “System Protection” panel you used above. Click “OK” and System Restore will be enabled. The less space you provide, the fewer restore points System Restore will be able to kepe at once. Select your system drive and click the “Configure” button if you want to enable it.Ĭlick the “Turn on system protection” option and choose how much disk space you want to reserve for your restore points. Open this window and you’ll see that system protection is “Off” for your Windows 10 system drive and the other drives in your computer. You can also open the Control Panel, navigate to “System”, and click the “System Protection” link in the sidebar. The quickest way to access System Restore settings will be to open the Start menu or Start screen, type “Restore” to search for it, and click the “Create a restore point” shortcut.
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This option is only available in the Control Panel, not the new Settings app. If you want to enable and rely on System Restore, this must be done preemptively, before you have a problem. When you re-enable it, it will create a new snapshot - of your current system in its damaged state, if it’s damaged. If you’re experiencing a system problem, re-enabling System Restore won’t help because you won’t have any old snapshots to restore. If you have a big hard drive in your PC, however, it won’t be a big deal.īear in mind that it’s disabled by default, so it hasn’t been creating snapshots. It will use some system storage space for its snapshots, so you probably won’t want to do this on inexpensive laptops and tablets with only a small amount of storage space. You can re-enable System Restore from the Control Panel. Windows 10’s PC reset feature that will give you a fresh Windows system without necessarily wiping your files is one big help here. System Restore is also less necessary thanks to other features in Windows 10 that can quickly get your Windows system back to a fresh state without a full reinstallation of Windows. Microsoft wants Windows 10 to run on devices with as little as 16 GB of internal storage - all the better to compete with Chromebooks and cheap Android tablets. System Restore can use quite a bit of disk space when it creates those snapshots, and Microsoft is trying to get Windows 10’s disk space requirements down. Microsoft hasn’t really explained why it’s not enabling System Restore by default.
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