

- #HOW TO UNINSTALL MICROSOFT OFFICE ON DELL DESKTOP INSTALL#
- #HOW TO UNINSTALL MICROSOFT OFFICE ON DELL DESKTOP DRIVERS#
- #HOW TO UNINSTALL MICROSOFT OFFICE ON DELL DESKTOP UPDATE#
- #HOW TO UNINSTALL MICROSOFT OFFICE ON DELL DESKTOP UPGRADE#
Still not working? If the problem occurred after updating the app, uninstall the latest version, and install the previous version from Dell’s support center. To do this, right-click on the app’s desktop shortcut and select Run as Administrator. Run the app with administrative privilege. However, if the problem persists, uninstall the app using a powerful uninstaller.ĭoes the problem persist? Try running the app as an administrator.
#HOW TO UNINSTALL MICROSOFT OFFICE ON DELL DESKTOP UPDATE#
Reinstalling the Dell Update seems to have fixed the issue for many users.
#HOW TO UNINSTALL MICROSOFT OFFICE ON DELL DESKTOP DRIVERS#
The popular laptop manufacturer Dell offers Dell Update, an application that automatically updates critical fixes and important device drivers as they become available.

#HOW TO UNINSTALL MICROSOFT OFFICE ON DELL DESKTOP UPGRADE#
This one has the i5 with 16 GB of RAM, and the Windows version I saw didn’t offer that combo… to get 16 GB, you had to upgrade to the i7, for another $200.Home › Software › Drivers › Dell Update for Windows 10 not working / app broken My model (“Dell XPS 13 Developer Edition”) did not come with a Windows option, so I can’t compare directly what it would have been with Windows. Or maybe they just thought it would cost them more to support it, with most of their tech force geared toward Windows. But Linux is free, and Windows costs Dell money! How could it be?Īpparently, the bloatware like McAfee and such subsidized the cost of Windows, and part of the cost of the hardware. I had read years ago about some other Dell, where people had been begging Dell to have a Linux OEM version without Windows, and when it came, they were shocked that it cost more, not less. That and some custom drivers were all that I saw that was not standard Ubuntu stuff. One is a support assistant thing, and the other is a rescue media builder, which builds an Ubuntu reinstaller from the recovery partition, much as it would be with a Windows system. There are two Dell programs preinstalled on Linux. Of course, that didn’t mean I left Ubuntu (with GNOME) on there… soon as I learned all I needed to about the default installation, out it went. There (apparently) is no Linux bloatware, so nothing to remove. I had those on my Dell G3 (which came with Windows 10) also when it was new,and I removed them with no issues.
