F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Transfer of hard disk data

Transfer of hard disk data

Transfer of hard disk data

T
toonchagirl
Member
53
01-25-2016, 08:40 AM
#1
You’ll need to reconfigure some things when moving your old PC to a new one. Your settings, games, and apps won’t stay exactly as they are unless you transfer or reinstall them properly. Security configurations should remain intact if you apply the same settings afterward. Make sure to back up anything important before making changes.
T
toonchagirl
01-25-2016, 08:40 AM #1

You’ll need to reconfigure some things when moving your old PC to a new one. Your settings, games, and apps won’t stay exactly as they are unless you transfer or reinstall them properly. Security configurations should remain intact if you apply the same settings afterward. Make sure to back up anything important before making changes.

A
akanijo
Member
170
02-09-2016, 08:32 AM
#2
Are you just going to swap the drive in to the new machine? It should be fine. Windows will redo the drivers. Otherwise, if you clean install then answer would be no. Though there is a way to get some of your settings and stuff back. Steam games can be easily transferred. Applications have to be reinstalled on a clean install. Data can be transferred easily.
A
akanijo
02-09-2016, 08:32 AM #2

Are you just going to swap the drive in to the new machine? It should be fine. Windows will redo the drivers. Otherwise, if you clean install then answer would be no. Though there is a way to get some of your settings and stuff back. Steam games can be easily transferred. Applications have to be reinstalled on a clean install. Data can be transferred easily.

F
FazYT
Junior Member
13
02-10-2016, 10:49 PM
#3
You're planning to move the drive to a new machine using Windows 10, which should handle the driver updates automatically. Thanks for your message—I'm here to help with any questions before you proceed. Just a quick laugh about it! 😊
F
FazYT
02-10-2016, 10:49 PM #3

You're planning to move the drive to a new machine using Windows 10, which should handle the driver updates automatically. Thanks for your message—I'm here to help with any questions before you proceed. Just a quick laugh about it! 😊

X
xPurpleBurn
Junior Member
2
02-23-2016, 02:51 AM
#4
You might encounter problems and need to begin again. The best approach is to back up your drive first, then transfer the data. I set up a virtual disk using Disk Utility and cloned my boot drive into it, which allows me to access it after a fresh installation.
X
xPurpleBurn
02-23-2016, 02:51 AM #4

You might encounter problems and need to begin again. The best approach is to back up your drive first, then transfer the data. I set up a virtual disk using Disk Utility and cloned my boot drive into it, which allows me to access it after a fresh installation.

R
reily1
Member
226
03-01-2016, 09:11 AM
#5
It should be fine. On Windows 10 you don’t need to perform an OOBE before moving the drive as you do on Windows 7.
R
reily1
03-01-2016, 09:11 AM #5

It should be fine. On Windows 10 you don’t need to perform an OOBE before moving the drive as you do on Windows 7.

E
Ellie1483
Junior Member
28
03-21-2016, 12:29 PM
#6
Thanks for that.
E
Ellie1483
03-21-2016, 12:29 PM #6

Thanks for that.

E
Eppikx
Senior Member
447
03-21-2016, 12:43 PM
#7
Windows manages everything on its own except for activation. After upgrading from my 3570K to the 2600X, I simply plugged in the new drive onto the new motherboard, powered it up, and when Windows started, it detected all the hardware and installed/activated the required drivers. I've been using it ever since.
E
Eppikx
03-21-2016, 12:43 PM #7

Windows manages everything on its own except for activation. After upgrading from my 3570K to the 2600X, I simply plugged in the new drive onto the new motherboard, powered it up, and when Windows started, it detected all the hardware and installed/activated the required drivers. I've been using it ever since.