F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Guide pour Windows 7

Guide pour Windows 7

Guide pour Windows 7

R
RainbowCrazy
Member
229
02-16-2025, 06:29 PM
#1
You're looking to move Windows 7 from an old HP laptop to a new gaming PC. You're okay with transferring just the operating system, not the files. Since the OS was likely installed when you bought it, your goal is to get a clean installation on the new machine. With some basic computer knowledge, there are straightforward methods available.
R
RainbowCrazy
02-16-2025, 06:29 PM #1

You're looking to move Windows 7 from an old HP laptop to a new gaming PC. You're okay with transferring just the operating system, not the files. Since the OS was likely installed when you bought it, your goal is to get a clean installation on the new machine. With some basic computer knowledge, there are straightforward methods available.

M
mf_lego
Junior Member
1
02-24-2025, 12:21 PM
#2
Duplique l'HDD
M
mf_lego
02-24-2025, 12:21 PM #2

Duplique l'HDD

M
martims098
Member
193
02-24-2025, 12:43 PM
#3
I wouldn't. Using it on other machines could confuse drivers, and the Windows key might not function properly after being used on that specific laptop.
M
martims098
02-24-2025, 12:43 PM #3

I wouldn't. Using it on other machines could confuse drivers, and the Windows key might not function properly after being used on that specific laptop.

H
HoodieSwag
Member
125
02-26-2025, 05:36 PM
#4
H
HoodieSwag
02-26-2025, 05:36 PM #4

D
deccam
Member
52
02-26-2025, 11:49 PM
#5
Well, let me share a quirky tale about this topic. My friend had an old HP TX-2000 series AMD 12.1-inch tablet with a touchscreen, and when his brother accidentally spilled water on it, things got interesting. What stood out was that we managed to start a native Desktop AMD setup, even though the graphics and USB drivers were faulty. After updating the chipset and installing the correct graphics drivers, the system ran smoothly for about thirty days. Still, we couldn't legally activate Windows because the original HP laptop key was required, but it worked perfectly during that period.
D
deccam
02-26-2025, 11:49 PM #5

Well, let me share a quirky tale about this topic. My friend had an old HP TX-2000 series AMD 12.1-inch tablet with a touchscreen, and when his brother accidentally spilled water on it, things got interesting. What stood out was that we managed to start a native Desktop AMD setup, even though the graphics and USB drivers were faulty. After updating the chipset and installing the correct graphics drivers, the system ran smoothly for about thirty days. Still, we couldn't legally activate Windows because the original HP laptop key was required, but it worked perfectly during that period.