Get Ready for Win7: Hard Drive Upgrade

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If you clone for the first time, it 's a good idea to have an extra backup somewhere in case you goof up and end up with two blank drives.
Acronis True Image is a great program for cloning drives and backing up to an image.



 
Can't go wrong with ghosting it. However most times I just log into administrator account and copy the entire user folder onto an external drive then reformat. Keeping previously installed software such as games and applications doesn't serve much purpose but sometimes there can be save games there. Most often people won't be saving their word documents within the microsoft office folder under program files. But I can understand people wanting to save their quicken databases and such from there too so ghosting can be a good route to go and you can restore it later.

Normally at home I just put a new drive in and do a fresh install and then whatever I need from the previous installation I can just retrieve by plugging the drive into an external bay. The thing that takes me the most time is reconfiguring steam because rather than re-downloading everything I like to set steam set up then copy all my data files back over from the previous drive to the new location. Seems to work for the most part, last time I just had trouble getting TF2 up but eventually I recopied it and it worked fine.
 
[citation][nom]teeth_03[/nom]Isn't one of the key selling points of W7 is low HDD usage?Article Fail[/citation]
Yes, but it still takes up *some* space--space which many people may not have. Why would upgrading to Windows 7 be a bad time to upgrade your hard drive?
 
I kinda wish the "Get The Right Drive" section had spent a little more time exploring the benefits of a 10000rpm drive or any time on ssd drives. I'm considering getting a new drive for my upgrade and that's the first thing I started to consider, so even if the recommendation is to forego raptors or ssds, it wouldn't have left a hole in the article that had me wondering.
Otherwise a great article! Just my 2 cents.
 
If you don't run millions of I/O's per second with extremely hard drive intensive programs, then 2x 640GB WD Caviar Black Raid 0 is enough, ssd/raptor is overkill.
 
I have an older PC with HD memory poroblems and I do indeed need to upgrade the HD. Problem is the O/S I am running is Win XP and it's so old I have lost the master CD. As it's a PC I built myself, years ago, I have no place to go to get another copy.
Any thoughts on the best way I should proceed? Is it possible to buy a "new" copy of W XP for the new HD, or should I SPEND MONEY to get a whole new copy of W 7? Wwhich I supect would be very expensive and defeat the whole project?
 
Most HDs either come with formatting/partitioning and copying software, or it can be down loaded from the HD mfr's website. Is after-mkt software really needed? Maybe more convenient/faster/versatile, but not cheaper.
 
If you ever plan on getting rid of the drive to a friend don't forget to do a government wipe on it. Crap Cleaner is a good free tool to do this, makes sure no personal information is on the drive. It can also clean up your registry and other things as well.
 
My Win7 copy fitted perfectly on a 6GB space!
I'm actually thinking about purchasing a 32GB SSD, and keep the dnld's for the ext. HD!
 
I have unplugged my hard drive to check the connections but now computer has crashed. What do I so now?!?
 
the only problem with Ghosting a drive is that it will copy any virus, malware or corrupt files that may be on your old drive. Even if you are very careful about checking for spyware and malware it can still reside on your PC. Also, if your drive is old, there is a very good chance that you have corrupt files, registry problems or other things that you are now moving to your new hard drive.

I think you should clone your drive with some of the free cloning software Like Drive Image XML, but only use it in case of emergency. I reccommend backing up your relevant data and doing a clean install of windows. If you want to make this process easier, purchase some PC/Hard drive migration software like SoftRescue Pro ( http://www.SoftRescue.com/us I think is the URL). It will backup your selected applications, email, files and settings and move them to your new PC or new hard drive without you having to find the installation CDs or product keys and they guarantee virus & malware free transfers. This eliminates the problems that are usually associated with cloning & ghosting software...no virus, malware, spyware, unneeded registry keys, corrupt registry keys, other corrupt files, etc. I tried it and it worked well for me...I'd say it's worth the $40 I paid....probably find it cheaper if you shop around too.
 
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