- Feb 20, 2000
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Was just wondering if I wanted to swap my hard drive from a MSI K7N2-L to a Shuttle SN45G, should I format or would all the system things be fine because they're both nForce 2's?
Originally posted by: pspada
Now, assuming you were to install a bunch of apps or games on your D: drive (the 2nd partition), when you reinstall the OS on the 1st partition, you will again have to install the apps or games again, since the new installation of windows will not even know they exist on the 2nd partition/drive.
k, that is what i was looking for. i was hoping to find a way to prevent that, if possible, for my next build. any suggestions on the best way to set up the OS and hdd so that a mobo shuffle in the future is easier to do without a complete format?
regarding this:
If the HAL (hardware abstraction layer) is different, (like with a Intel vs. AMD processor, or a new chipset) Windows NT/2000/XP has problems. But you can usualy just start a fresh install, and when it asks where (what partition) you want to install you instead repair the original installation, it usually works just fine to fix the differences. And while it does leave your data and installed software intact, you again have to update the OS from windowsupdate.microsoft.com.
so, if i were going from a VIA KT333 to an Nforce2 (both Epox), the "repair" option might work, but a fresh install is the safest bet (obviously ghosting the hdd before trying)? what about going from a VIA KT333 to a VIA KT400 or 600? is that easier and more of a sure-thing, since it's the same chipset?
sorry if i hijacked yer thread, The_Lurker. at least i've tried to keep it on topic
deadseasquirrel
Originally posted by: KF
One more possibility. The reason it is sometimes hard to do a HD over MB transplant is that XP may crash on booting the new combo even in safe mode.... So what you can BEFORE you switch is boot in safe mode, enter Device Manager and delete all drivers.
The big reason I don't like to reinstall apps is they all have updates and patches. Another reason is I have about ten zillion little free programs I don't know where I got.
(I'm not advocating piracy. But activation is a PITA to hardware geeks.)
Originally posted by: awanSky
Will this "Repair" or "Fresh Install on current OS" works on WIN2K?
Originally posted by: benchiu
Is it that big of a deal to reinstall? As long as you have partitions on your drives for storage/installs/system, reinstallation is really not that bad. Now if you only have 1 partition for everything, then I understand how much of a pain it is.
Originally posted by: deadseasquirrel
Yeah, 1 partition here. That's why I'd like to know of other options. If the "repair" option works, great, but, if there's a less risky method of preparing for such a drastic hardware change in the future when you first set up, I'd rather do that. benchiu, what is the best way to partition your drive on set-up to make this easier then? And, upon fresh install, do any apps or games need to be reinstalled? or shortcuts updated? or all those little .dlls or system files that get copied over to a windows\system dir upon program installation? deadseasquirrelOriginally posted by: benchiu Is it that big of a deal to reinstall? As long as you have partitions on your drives for storage/installs/system, reinstallation is really not that bad. Now if you only have 1 partition for everything, then I understand how much of a pain it is.