The process seemed quite simple and I anticipated the whole thing being done in an hour or two at most.Īfter installing the drive, my PC didn't "realize" it was there (my bad), so I went into the BIOS and set the SATA channel the drive was using to Active. I reviewed both the online documentation and the User Guide. I had initially settled on Acronis' Migrate Easy product, since I didn't need all of the features offered by True Image, but True Image was $10 cheaper and I'm all about getting a bargain.Īfter stopping by my local computer parts and repair store to pick up a SATA data cable, I was ready to install the new drive and get to work. Now all I had to do was figure out how to transfer Windows 7 from one SATA drive to another.Īfter doing a bit of research, including asking the fine folks at .uk for advice (one of the finest technical certification discussion forums on the planet), I chose Acronis True Image Home 2011 for the job. Fortunately, the folks I work for in my day job had decommissioned a lot of hardware and computer parts and I was able to get my hands on a fairly good sized SATA HDD. Even storing all of my data and VMs on a separate (and much larger) drive didn't really help. Needless to say, 18+ months later, it was filling up fast. I bought a Windows 7 Professional 64-bit PC from Dell about a year and a half ago and made the mistake of choosing an OS drive with insufficient room.
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