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On 6/16/06, Jones, John (US) <John.Jones@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Try this: Buy the notebook ($700), the faster drive ($130), backup or disk imaging software like Norton Ghost ($26 for 100% legal OEM version: http://www.buycheapsoftware.com/details.asp?productID=1795 ), and a 2.5" USB-powered external drive enclosure (maybe $25). Install the fast drive in the enclosure & connect to the notebook. Clone the slow drive to the fast drive & then swap the disks (or simply reinstall on the fast drive). Ending config: slow in enclosure, fast in notebook. Now use the slow drive to back up the fast drive periodically or as a general purpose external USB-attached/USB-powered portable drive.
I've got a similar situation I'm trying to address, although for different reasons. My previous employer was getting rid of all of their old PC equipment by letting employees take them. Me being a cheapwad and all that, plus having three kids who do homework at the same time, blah, blah, blah, I took home a couple of them. This one PC has Windows XP Pro loaded but the HD has only a 6GB capacity (you read right: six gigabytes). I have no idea what they were thinking when they installed this; the PC easily predates the XP OS (I think it's a 266MHz w/ 128MB ram). I was going to turn this box into a ipCop appliance, but didn't want to "waste" the XP Pro install. Ideally, it'd be nice to ghost this drive, and "paste" it to a new drive. Preferably a new drive on a new machine. But where does Windows Activation puke, if at all? I could probably retrieve the Windows product key using a free keyfinder utility. Based on the age of the machine, this install of WinXP Pro could not possibly be an OEM install, but rather a retail upgrade. Presuming that, should I be able to "legally" move the OS to another machine? What thinkest thou? TIA, Dan
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