Hello, my computer crashed. Can I:
1. Buy cheap hard drive and install it as the primary drive and un-install
old drive.
2. re-install XP.
3. re-install the old drive as the secondary drive and retrive all programs,
folders and files???
Thanks, Alan
> Hello, my computer crashed. Can I:
> 1. Buy cheap hard drive and install it as the primary drive and un-install
> old drive.
> 2. re-install XP.
> 3. re-install the old drive as the secondary drive and retrive all programs,
> folders and files???
> Thanks, Alan
Yes you can if you have a full Retail XP CD not an OEM machine.
On Fri, 14 Mar 2008 15:33:00 -0700, alanrr
<alanrr@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> Hello, my computer crashed. Can I:
> 1. Buy cheap hard drive and install it as the primary drive and un-install
> old drive.
Yes.
> 2. re-install XP.
Yes.
> 3. re-install the old drive as the secondary drive
Yes.
> and retrive all programs,
No.
Except for a very occasional small program, all programs have pointers
to where they are located in the Windows registry (and elsewhere) as
well as supporting files. If you try to use a program that wasn't
installed in that copy of Windows, those pointers will be wrong and
the supporting files will be missing, and the programs will not work.
> folders and files???
Yes.
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
"nass" <nass@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:9A16F0BC-0300-4826-BAE7-E64E2999374D@microsoft.com...
>
>
> "alanrr" wrote:
>
>> Hello, my computer crashed. Can I:
>> 1. Buy cheap hard drive and install it as the primary drive and
>> un-install
>> old drive.
>> 2. re-install XP.
>> 3. re-install the old drive as the secondary drive and retrive all
>> programs,
>> folders and files???
>> Thanks, Alan
>
> Yes you can if you have a full Retail XP CD not an OEM machine.
Given they are just replacing the hard drive and not the motherboard it will
also work for OEM versions.
> "nass" <nass@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
> news:9A16F0BC-0300-4826-BAE7-E64E2999374D@microsoft.com...
> >
> >
> > "alanrr" wrote:
> >
> >> Hello, my computer crashed. Can I:
> >> 1. Buy cheap hard drive and install it as the primary drive and
> >> un-install
> >> old drive.
> >> 2. re-install XP.
> >> 3. re-install the old drive as the secondary drive and retrive all
> >> programs,
> >> folders and files???
> >> Thanks, Alan
> >
> > Yes you can if you have a full Retail XP CD not an OEM machine.
> Given they are just replacing the hard drive and not the motherboard it will
> also work for OEM versions.
Some brands will not allow you to do so,as the OEM been locked on the CD for
a serial number for the HDD
"alanrr" <alanrr@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:812EEE4B-139D-4113-9D64-F0B72E1A0437@microsoft.com...
> Hello, my computer crashed. Can I:
> 1. Buy cheap hard drive and install it as the primary drive and un-install
> old drive.
> 2. re-install XP.
> 3. re-install the old drive as the secondary drive and retrive all
> programs,
> folders and files???
> Thanks, Alan
First, what do you mean by "my computer crashed"?
Second, yes you can install a new drive and install XP to it if you have the
install media you need. If your system depended on a recovery partition,
you have a problem (which you can overcome with cloning software, presuming
that the old drive still functions). To do that, you will need another
system with XP and a way to mount both drives, the old and new, at the same
time. USB2 drive cases are good for this.
But you cannot, once you've reinstalled XP, recover the *programs or
settings* from the old drive. Programs have to be reinstalled; you can use
the Program files folder on the old drive as a reminder of what you need to
reinstall, but you generally can't just copy the files over.
Data can be copied, but be aware that many core programs keep their data in
folders helpfully set as hidden. Many email programs do this. You have
to set Explorer to show hidden/system folders and know where to look, or at
least what you're looking for.
Finally, don't buy a "cheap" hard drive. Buy a *good* one, which won't
likely cost much more.