F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Guide to transferring your operating system

Guide to transferring your operating system

Guide to transferring your operating system

B
beichner
Senior Member
447
01-10-2016, 07:49 PM
#1
You're planning to upgrade your girlfriend's PC by moving its operating system to a larger NVMe SSD. Since she already has media files and the OS inside the current drive, you'll need to transfer everything carefully without affecting her games. You can use a bootable USB or a live Linux distribution to perform the move safely. Make sure to back up any important data before proceeding.
B
beichner
01-10-2016, 07:49 PM #1

You're planning to upgrade your girlfriend's PC by moving its operating system to a larger NVMe SSD. Since she already has media files and the OS inside the current drive, you'll need to transfer everything carefully without affecting her games. You can use a bootable USB or a live Linux distribution to perform the move safely. Make sure to back up any important data before proceeding.

L
LuckyDog2000
Member
56
01-11-2016, 04:18 AM
#2
Use Macrium Reflect to generate a bootable USB via Rescue USB, enabling you to back up your current system even when it's running. Once the clone boots, install on a fresh drive while all other disks remain disconnected. After initial setup, the system will reinitialize and allow connecting additional drives. You can then transfer the cloned system to the new drive using the updated machine, which simplifies the process since the M.2 slot is already ready. The main challenge remains Windows activation; before modifying hardware, associate your local account with the Microsoft account using the old setup. No need for a full Windows reinstall or update at this stage.
L
LuckyDog2000
01-11-2016, 04:18 AM #2

Use Macrium Reflect to generate a bootable USB via Rescue USB, enabling you to back up your current system even when it's running. Once the clone boots, install on a fresh drive while all other disks remain disconnected. After initial setup, the system will reinitialize and allow connecting additional drives. You can then transfer the cloned system to the new drive using the updated machine, which simplifies the process since the M.2 slot is already ready. The main challenge remains Windows activation; before modifying hardware, associate your local account with the Microsoft account using the old setup. No need for a full Windows reinstall or update at this stage.

T
62
01-11-2016, 04:34 AM
#3
You achieve this by using AOMEI Partition Assistant, which is a highly effective tool I personally rely on.
T
Tautgroundhog7
01-11-2016, 04:34 AM #3

You achieve this by using AOMEI Partition Assistant, which is a highly effective tool I personally rely on.

F
FieryExile_
Member
231
01-26-2016, 03:31 PM
#4
Have you thought about getting a new setup? In any case, make sure to save your crucial data before anything goes wrong.
F
FieryExile_
01-26-2016, 03:31 PM #4

Have you thought about getting a new setup? In any case, make sure to save your crucial data before anything goes wrong.

W
Welmetia
Junior Member
6
01-26-2016, 03:43 PM
#5
It acts as a duplicate for safety, so making another isn't required.
W
Welmetia
01-26-2016, 03:43 PM #5

It acts as a duplicate for safety, so making another isn't required.

S
Sheikah21
Member
149
01-27-2016, 05:31 PM
#6
Updated to Windows version
S
Sheikah21
01-27-2016, 05:31 PM #6

Updated to Windows version