If you’re a gamer (or just a PC user) with NVIDIA graphics, NVIDIA’s drivers are probably wasting gigabytes of storage on your hard drive. NVIDIA leaves old installer files buried on your hard drive until you get annoyed and manually delete them…if you even realize you need to.
When you're clearing out your hard drive, you should probably avoid messing around with system files too much. However, with NVIDIA installations, there are some places you can clear out.
As someone who’s used NVIDIA graphics hardware for years, this has been annoying me for a very long time. I’ve seen these files use over 4 GB of space, and, while that may sound like a small amount of space to some, it’s a lot of wasted space on a smaller SSD. And you’ll probably only notice it if you use a disk space analysis tool.
Update: NVIDIA reached out to us with some new information. In GeForce Experience 3.9.0, NVIDIA added a cleanup tool that will automatically remove old driver versions. NVIDIA now only keeps installers for the current and previous version of the driver, which will be about 1 GB in total.
- NVidia Drivers Download Utility is professional utility which is designed to fix drivers issues.NVidia Drivers Download Utility is highly recommended for updating all NVIDIA GeForce drivers.This tool is specially used to update your system drivers for N.
- NVIDIA Drivers 399.24 vs 416.16 on GTX 1060 6GB Xiaomi Mi Band 3 Smart Bracelet - https://www.gearbest.com/smart-watches/pp49.html?wid=1349303&lki.
NVIDIA also said they plan to add a “Revert to prior driver” feature in a future version of GeForce Experience. That’s why NVIDIA stores these files on your hard drive.
Where These Files Are Stored
RELATED:The Four Best Free Tools to Analyze Hard Drive Space on Your Windows PC
At the moment, NVIDIA stores these graphics driver installation files at C:ProgramDataNVIDIA CorporationDownloader. The ProgramData directory is hidden by default, so you have to either view hidden files or type C:ProgramData
into your file manager’s location bar to go there.
To see exactly how much space these files are using on your PC, open the NVIDIA Corporation directory here, right-click the “Downloader” folder, and select “Properties”.
In the screenshot below, these files are only using 1.4 GB of space on our test system. However, that’s just because we cleared these files out a few months ago. We’ve seen this folder balloon much larger in the past.
Previous versions of the NVIDIA software stored these driver installation files at C:Program FilesNVIDIA CorporationInstaller2, C:ProgramDataNVIDIA CorporationNetService, and just under the C:NVIDIA folder. If you haven’t reinstalled Windows or deleted these files in a while, they may still be stored in these folders. We’re not sure if NVIDIA’s software ever deletes them.
Nvidia Old Drivers Win7
What Are They?
If you open the Downloader folder, you’ll see a number of folders with random-looking names. Double-click one of these folders, and you’ll see exactly what’s inside: NVIDIA driver updates in .exe form.
Basically, whenever NVIDIA’s GeForce Experience software downloads a driver update, it stores a full copy of that update’s installer here. Even after the driver is successfully installed, the installers are left here.
The “latest” folder stores an uncompressed copy of the latest driver update. This should only be needed during the driver installation process, and you’ll only need it again if you ever need to reinstall the latest driver.
Why Does NVIDIA Keep Them Around?
We reached out to NVIDIA to ask why GeForce Experience stores copies of all these installers in a folder like this, but NVIDIA didn’t respond.
RELATED:How to Recover From a Bad GPU Driver Update
We can imagine what these are for, however. If a driver update causes a problem, you can head to this folder to reinstall the previous driver update. They’re all here and ready to go, so you can easily revert to a previous driver without a long download if you have a problem.
That’s all well and good, but how often do users really need to revert graphics drivers? And wouldn’t it be better just to keep one or two of the most recent “good” drivers, rather than store 4 GB of drivers going back many versions? After all, even if a user needed to revert to an old driver, they could always download the old version from NVIDIA’s website. There’s no need to waste 4 GB of hard disk space “just in case”.
This makes even less sense when you consider that NVIDIA’s GeForce Experience software does not make it easy to revert to another driver version. It doesn’t even tell users that these installers exist. Hardly anyone will ever find and run these, so why keep them around? If these files have to stick around, GeForce Experience should offer a way to manage them so users don’t need to dig into the ProgramData folder to free up space.
How to Delete Them
While the default Windows file permissions won’t let you delete the entire Downloader folder, we’ve found that you can simply open the Downloader folder and delete the “latest” folder and the other folders with random names. Leave the “config” folder and “status.json” file alone.
This will free up the space used by NVIDIA installer files on your system. However, when GeForce Experience downloads new driver files and installs them, those new driver files will be stored here until you delete them, too.
RELATED:CCleaner Was Hacked: What You Need to Know
CCleaner can also automatically erase these NVIDIA installer files. Messy installers that greedily consume disk space like this without giving users control are a big reason why so many Windows users end up running tools like CCleaner. If software developers behaved better, so many users wouldn’t have been in danger from the CCleaner hack.
READ NEXT- › What Does “FWIW” Mean, and How Do You Use It?
- › How to Automatically Delete Your YouTube History
- › What Is “Mixed Content,” and Why Is Chrome Blocking It?
- › How to Manage Multiple Mailboxes in Outlook
- › How to Move Your Linux home Directory to Another Drive
GeForce Experience driver installation failed. How do I manually install the NVIDIA driver for my graphics card?
A driver installation may fail for a number of reasons. Users may be running a program in the background that inteferes with the installation. If Windows is performing a background Windows Update, a driver installation may also fail. This articles provides step by steps instructions for removing the NVIDIA display driver and then manually install the driver user the NVIDIA Game Ready Driver installer.
Nvidia Old Drivers March Download
1. Start by pressing the Windows key on your keyboard to bring up Windows search/Start menu
2. Start typing on your keyboard the words 'Control Panel'
3. The Control Panel icon should appear as a search result. Select this icon to launch the Windows Control Panel.
4. Once the Control Panel launches, look for 'Programs and Features' and double-click on the icon to launch.
5. Select NVIDIA Graphics Driver from the list of installed programs. If you have a long list of programs installed on your PC, you may need to scroll down to find the NVIDIA Graphics Driver. Click Uninstall/Change to remove the NVIDIA drivers from your PC.
6. Once the uninstall process has completed, reboot your PC to complete the changes.
7. Once you are back in Windows, go to the NVIDIA Driver Download Archive page and download the latest driver (or previous driver version if you are experiencing an issue with the latest driver and a specific game/app). Save the file to your hard drive
8. Right-click over the file and select Run as administrator as shown in the screenshot below.
9. If you are promted by Windows User Account Control, click on Yes.
Nvidia Free Download Windows 7
10. The installer will prompt you for an extraction path. Most user should be fine with the default path. Once the driver install has completed, the extracted files will automatically be removed from your PC. Choose OK.
11. You will next be prompted to accept the NVIDIA software license agreement. Read the contents and then if you agree, click 'AGREE AND CONTINUE' to proceed.
12. Next choose Custom (Advanced). Then click NEXT
13) Select Perform clean install and then click on NEXT.
14. Once the installation has finished, reboot your PC one more time to complete the installation.