bbarry wrote:
Thanks, Jay. I had already used the path that Steve posted, and I didn't see any OneDrive startup. So hopefully I am home free at this point.
In my opinion, OneDrive proved to be a very messy and difficult software program to use...truly a POS and just another attempt by Microsoft to hook into your wallet.
Actually, with Office 365, there is not likely to be the issue you had with it filling up. If I remember right you get 5GB. With Office 365 you get 1TB. I use Microsoft 365 Personal which costs me $74.19 annually including tax. I can install on as many systems as I want but can only have Office apps open on 5 at a time, LOL! Not an issue. And not only is it 1TB One Drive storage but it is 1TB of One Drive storage for each install. Pretty good deal actually.
I don't actively use One Drive but I DO have a few items stored on-line, I just do it manually.
Anyway, if you don't get any One Drive prompts when rebooting all is good and there is no need to do anything else. If you do get One Drive prompts on a boot you can still get to the Startup that should show One Drive even though settings/apps/startup does not, you just need to do it through Task Manager instead of System Configuration. To get there you would type task manager in your search and hit enter (or just press Ctrl + Shift + Esc) then to to Startup. This will look different than the image I posted but is still functional. Instead of a list with check boxes you will just get a list that shows enabled/disabled but it is still functional. Just right click on One Drive if One Drive shows and is enabled and then select to disable.