RonH wrote: ↑23 Nov 2024, 14:17
Idiot ... me! Of course this i5 has SSD so the best I can do (I think) would be to restore using the Windows 11 Settings facility. Correct
At first glance I thought that I knew so little about cleaning a computer for resale, but then I saw your gambit "Idiot ... me! " and took courage.
I note two points that you raise:-
(1) The prospect wants to see the computer working and
(2) You want to purge the disk.
If this will be a face-to-face sale, where the user meets with you to exchange cash and computer, then surely it is worth it for both of you to spend a half-hour together; either of you would spend less time in a store, yes?
You meet in the cafe, plug in the computer, boot it up and say "Look! It Works!!!"
The prospect agrees.
You then instigate the factory reset procedure, but insist on having the cash in hand while the Prospect chooses "Yes" (or whatever the answer is) to begin the factory reset.
There must be a divide, a watershed, where your data is guaranteed gone (except for a forensic recovery by MI5 or the CIA) and you hold the cash?
Of course, I might be an idiot. Suppose that you make a complete system backup on a boot-able recovery drive before heading off to the cafe, and that your Prospect backs out shortly after clicking "Yes". The prospect powers off and unplugs the computer partway through the factory reset.
Will your at-home recovery be able to re-instate your system from it's partially-reset state?
Cheers, Chris