Difference between revisions of "A Larger Drive for the Windows PC (With Linux Help)"

From assela Pathirana
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Your computer's hard drive can not take it any more. Information has flooded the disk and is about to overflow! Of course if this is data (like photos, documents, etc.) they can live in an external hard drive. But what if you need one more program than the disk can take in? Our primary home computer is a HP slim tower of yesteryear that has a 2G Athlon XP processor, 512MB memory and 40GB (yes 40!) of precious hard drive space. The hard drive is always more than 80% full and this caused the computer to be exteamely slow. We decided its time for a hard drive swap.  
Your computer's hard drive can not take it any more. Information has flooded the disk and is about to overflow! Of course if this is data (like photos, documents, etc.) they can live in an external hard drive. But what if you need one more program than the disk can take in? Our primary home computer is a HP slim tower of yesteryear that has a 2G Athlon XP processor, 512MB memory and 40GB (yes 40!) of precious hard drive space. The hard drive is always more than 80% full and this caused the computer to be exteamely slow. We decided its time for a hard drive swap.  


It is possible to install Windows XP from scratch in the new hard drive -- but then one needs to re-install all the software too. With about 30G of software already installed in the old disk this was not going to be a pretty picture. I needed a shortcut. Computer shops and corporate support groups routinely do what is known as 'Ghosting' with the ubiquitous {{wikip|Norton Ghost}} and many other tools. But, I did not want to shell out money to by a software for one-off use. Therefore went the 'open-source' way and were pleasantly surprised by how easy the whole thing ended up being!
It is possible to install Windows XP from scratch in the new hard drive -- but then one needs to re-install all the software too. With about 30G of software already installed in the old disk this was not going to be a pretty picture. I needed a shortcut. Computer shops and corporate support groups routinely do what is known as 'Ghosting' with the ubiquitous {{wikip|Norton Ghost|Ghost_(software)}} and many other tools. But, I did not want to shell out money to by a software for one-off use. Therefore went the 'open-source' way and were pleasantly surprised by how easy the whole thing ended up being!

Revision as of 10:43, 20 January 2008

Background

Your computer's hard drive can not take it any more. Information has flooded the disk and is about to overflow! Of course if this is data (like photos, documents, etc.) they can live in an external hard drive. But what if you need one more program than the disk can take in? Our primary home computer is a HP slim tower of yesteryear that has a 2G Athlon XP processor, 512MB memory and 40GB (yes 40!) of precious hard drive space. The hard drive is always more than 80% full and this caused the computer to be exteamely slow. We decided its time for a hard drive swap.

It is possible to install Windows XP from scratch in the new hard drive -- but then one needs to re-install all the software too. With about 30G of software already installed in the old disk this was not going to be a pretty picture. I needed a shortcut. Computer shops and corporate support groups routinely do what is known as 'Ghosting' with the ubiquitous Norton Ghost and many other tools. But, I did not want to shell out money to by a software for one-off use. Therefore went the 'open-source' way and were pleasantly surprised by how easy the whole thing ended up being!