You're welcome, Grafitti. Please keep us informed. I would be really proud if you could perform your migration using my harmless method.Sounds interesting, yordan.. I'll have to try that sometime. Thanks for the tip.
Yordan
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Posted 18 October 2007 - 05:03 PM
You're welcome, Grafitti. Please keep us informed. I would be really proud if you could perform your migration using my harmless method.Sounds interesting, yordan.. I'll have to try that sometime. Thanks for the tip.
Posted 18 October 2007 - 06:21 AM
Posted 12 October 2007 - 04:26 PM
Thanks for the link. I didn't know this "repair installation" trick.Alright, I poked around a bit and I found this somewhat detailed article addressing my problem:
Beginners Guides: Cloning WindowsXP -- Part 1B: Cloning for a new computer
It's a series of articles, actually, but this is the one most relevant. The technique described is basically the same one Grafitti beautifully explained earlier. However, the article points out, this procedure may constitute a violation of the End-User License Agreement (EULA) of the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM) versions of Windows XP.
Again, thanks everyone, especially Grafitti, for the great advice
As I already mentionned, the cloning methodology using a bootable CD or DVD I do very frequently, it works very well and is harmless. I did it only on identical hardware, and I am really impatient to test the extra "repair install" to include the new hardware drivers.boot up the new computer with the windows XP CD in the CD drive. You will need to ensure that the system is set to boot from the CD drive first. If it is not, this can be easily changed in the BIOS.
Press any key when prompted to boot from the XP CD.
You now need to perform a "Windows XP repair install," which redetects all hardware and reinstalls system files without touching the registry or user data present on the system. This process adapts your Windows XP install to the new hardware it is running on.
To do this first choose the "press enter to set up Windows XP now" option when prompted. Then, press F8 to skip through the EULA (though if you haven't read it before, you should now), and when the option presents itself, pres "R" to begin the repair installation.
Posted 10 October 2007 - 09:46 AM
Posted 10 October 2007 - 08:36 AM
Posted 10 October 2007 - 03:37 AM
It depends on what you count as wasted space. Generally in cloning to a larger hard disk size, you have two options. Either keep the partitions the same size, or resize them proportionately. Say you have a 40GB disk and you're upgrading to a 200GB. If your 40GB disk had a C: partition of 10GB and D: of 30GB, then your ratio is 1:4Hi Grafitti,
I've never heard about cloning before. I'll look into it and come back if I have questions -- which is really probable![]()
But wouldn't that require the two hard-disks being exactly the same size? In all likelihood, the new hard-disk will be much larger than the old one; in this case, wouldn't that waste a lot of disk space?
http://www.vista-files.org/programs/paragon-software-group/paragon-drive-copy-personal.html
Posted 09 October 2007 - 10:21 PM
... what you can do is mirror or clone the hard drive over to the new one.
Simply cloning a single partition hasn't always worked in my experience. But using proper drive cloning software, you get the new hard disk exactly the same as the old one, and then pop it in the new computer.
Be aware though that if you've patched the uxtheme.dll or similar stuff for customizing purposes, the reinstall will overwrite these patched system files with original windows ones.
But it hasn't failed me yet. --it's worth a try.
Also if you intend to keep both machines on a LAN together, make sure your cloning software supports new SID generation (or sysprep it) for the new box so that you don't have authentication collisions.
I believe that windows xp has a files and settings transfer wizard of some sort, have you looked into that?
Posted 09 October 2007 - 06:23 PM
Posted 09 October 2007 - 04:47 PM
Posted 09 October 2007 - 04:15 PM
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