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  3. Moving data to a new system

Moving data to a new system

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
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  • P Offline
    P Offline
    PaulCurry
    wrote on last edited by
    #1

    Hi all I am off for the summer and built a new P4 system, I have about 45 programs and about 55 Gigs of data to move with XP pro SP2 installed on both I tried transfer wizard, no luck, used a network to copy (a 100Mbps connection) slow, slow Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated Thanks Paul

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    • P PaulCurry

      Hi all I am off for the summer and built a new P4 system, I have about 45 programs and about 55 Gigs of data to move with XP pro SP2 installed on both I tried transfer wizard, no luck, used a network to copy (a 100Mbps connection) slow, slow Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated Thanks Paul

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      C Offline
      Christian Graus
      wrote on last edited by
      #2

      You take the hard drive out of machine a, put it into machine b, and then copy/paste. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++

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      • P PaulCurry

        Hi all I am off for the summer and built a new P4 system, I have about 45 programs and about 55 Gigs of data to move with XP pro SP2 installed on both I tried transfer wizard, no luck, used a network to copy (a 100Mbps connection) slow, slow Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated Thanks Paul

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        El Corazon
        wrote on last edited by
        #3

        well, a portable harddrive backup up, compressed and decompressed through a USB 2.0 (or better yet, firewire 800) pipe can take an hour plus, but get the job done (slower if you don't compress before sending it to the drive). Other than that, use the network copy while you are sleeping. :) or pop the drive out of your old computer, add it as a data drive to the new one, copy and return. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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        • P PaulCurry

          Hi all I am off for the summer and built a new P4 system, I have about 45 programs and about 55 Gigs of data to move with XP pro SP2 installed on both I tried transfer wizard, no luck, used a network to copy (a 100Mbps connection) slow, slow Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated Thanks Paul

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          S Offline
          Shog9 0
          wrote on last edited by
          #4

          I've tried scores of different ways to do this, and by far the fastest and least error-prone is to just physically move the old drive into the new PC and use a program that won't skip files to copy everything from the old drive to the new. This is quite a bit more difficult now that NTFS has largely replaced FAT32... but programs like PartitionMagic can be useful. Otherwise, try an XP boot disc and XCOPY.

          You must be careful in the forest Broken glass and rusty nails If you're to bring back something for us I have bullets for sale...

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          • P PaulCurry

            Hi all I am off for the summer and built a new P4 system, I have about 45 programs and about 55 Gigs of data to move with XP pro SP2 installed on both I tried transfer wizard, no luck, used a network to copy (a 100Mbps connection) slow, slow Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated Thanks Paul

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            D Offline
            David Wulff
            wrote on last edited by
            #5

            Half the fun of getting a new machine is installing everything from scratch again. It's like a spring clean, you get to wash out all those little bits of dirt that built up over the years. And if you're really lucky someone else pays you to do it too.


            Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
            Audioscrobbler :: flickr

            Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

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            • P PaulCurry

              Hi all I am off for the summer and built a new P4 system, I have about 45 programs and about 55 Gigs of data to move with XP pro SP2 installed on both I tried transfer wizard, no luck, used a network to copy (a 100Mbps connection) slow, slow Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated Thanks Paul

              P Offline
              P Offline
              PaulCurry
              wrote on last edited by
              #6

              Thanks you all for the fast replies I thought about taking out the old drive and changing jumper to slave, as their both the same size and partitioned with drive letters and paths the same, but won't windows trip over two master boot records Thanks again Paul

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              • P PaulCurry

                Thanks you all for the fast replies I thought about taking out the old drive and changing jumper to slave, as their both the same size and partitioned with drive letters and paths the same, but won't windows trip over two master boot records Thanks again Paul

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                El Corazon
                wrote on last edited by
                #7

                PaulCurry wrote: but won't windows trip over two master boot records it won't even notice.... having multiple boot disks at home for a specific reason.... Bios has a boot order list, it tries one, if it fails, it tries another. When the bios boot list finds a bootable object, it begins the boot process from the master boot record (which then starts windows, etc.) But once boot occurs, every other disk is a data drive. PaulCurry wrote: I thought about taking out the old drive and changing jumper to slave, or put them on different IDE chains (preferred if you have the cable), then you don't have to change the jumper. _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                • D David Wulff

                  Half the fun of getting a new machine is installing everything from scratch again. It's like a spring clean, you get to wash out all those little bits of dirt that built up over the years. And if you're really lucky someone else pays you to do it too.


                  Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
                  Audioscrobbler :: flickr

                  Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

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                  E Offline
                  El Corazon
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #8

                  David Wulff wrote: Half the fun of getting a new machine is installing everything from scratch again. It's like a spring clean, you get to wash out all those little bits of dirt that built up over the years. And if you're really lucky someone else pays you to do it too. And you skip problems with "almost recognizing drivers" (hardware that is similar enough it attempts to load drivers, and blue-screens). I always do a fresh install, safer... and you get to look at all the blinking lights you just bought. :D _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                  • D David Wulff

                    Half the fun of getting a new machine is installing everything from scratch again. It's like a spring clean, you get to wash out all those little bits of dirt that built up over the years. And if you're really lucky someone else pays you to do it too.


                    Ðavid Wulff The Royal Woofle Museum
                    Audioscrobbler :: flickr

                    Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen

                    P Offline
                    P Offline
                    PaulCurry
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #9

                    Wish I was that lucky Paul

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