Move wtv and mp4 files out of windows folder?


  1. Posts : 705
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #1

    Move wtv and mp4 files out of windows folder?


    I have a 1tb drive with 850gb used. So 150gb free.
    Can I move the 580gb worth of WMC recordings out of the windows folder by a cut and paste?
    wont that free the space in windows folder?
    Someone said I dont have enough space to do that.

    I was thinking if I had to reinstall windows, I could then keep those from being deleted, since everything in windows folder would be gone.
    Then cant WMC be told to use that folder outside of windows for storage or recorded TV?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 1,872
    Windows 10 Pro x64, Windows 8.1 Pro x64, Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1,
       #2

    If you only have one drive, it will not matter if you move things to another location on the same drive. The drive will remain filled to the same amount. You either need to get another drive, a larger drive or delete something from your existing drive.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 705
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #3

    yes, that is fine about keeping all on same hard drive.
    I might want to do the move, say If I had to reinstall windows, then windows folder could be deleted but I keep the videos, still all on the same drive..

    Wont a windows reinstall delete videos that are in standard OS designed locations?
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 2,752
    Windows 7 Pro x64 (1), Win7 Pro X64 (2)
       #4

    sdowney717 said:
    I was thinking if I had to reinstall windows, I could then keep those from being deleted, since everything in windows folder would be gone.
    What is the nature of the WTV recordings you currently have 1/2 TB of? If they are TV recordings from your cable company, and are copy-protected (which almost all are depending on your cable provider), you will LOSE THEM ALL if you reinstall Windows. This isn't because they got deleted, but because the DRM (digital rights management) encryption of those copy-protected WTV recordings can only be played back by WMC running on the exact same installed Windows that did the recording in the first place. Installing a new Windows creates a new encryption/decryption key which is 100% useless for your old copy-protected WTV recordings. Period.

    Now as far as simply getting them off of C, you really should probably have a second drive for "data". You than just define this second location to be part of the "recorded TV" folder structure for WMC, for playback. This "recorded TV LIBRARY" can be one or more folders (which will automatically get named "\Recorded TV" and that you can't change) spread across one or more drives.

    In contrast you can only have one "primary recording" folder (also named "\Recorded TV") which is somewhere on some drive. There is no "pool" of multiple folders available for recording, as there is available for playback. So if available space in that one recording folder (on that one drive) becomes an issue, you will need to manually move WTV recordings to some other one or more "playback folders" yourself in order to free up space for new recordings in the one-and-only "recording folder".

    That's why it's recommended to have almost a dedicated large-capacity drive (with good performance, so large cache and SATA-III and 7200rpm) for your "recording folder" which by definition is also your first "primary playback folder". This ensures you won't run out of room making new recordings. If things get critical (e.g. during the two weeks of Olympics recordings, when HD recording is almost continuous and possibly from multiple channels), you need to also have extensive secondary "playback folders" capacity, and manually move (with Windows Explorer or whatever) your recordings so that you still have them for eventual playback but still have available capacity for new ongoing recordings.

    NOTE: since \Recorded TV is in the root of a drive, you can only have one of these folders per drive. So if you need enormous capacity you need multiple drives, one "dedicated" for new recording, and one or more in the "playback" LIBRARY pool, each drive containing one \Recorded TV folder.

    Nevertheless... if you have copy-protected content, you WILL LOSE USABLE PLAYBACK ACCESS TO IT if you install a new Windows. Period. On the other hand, if this content is copy-freely content (either OTA/ATSC or delivered copy-freely by your cable system) then you can do whatever you want with no restrictions at all. That's why it's called "copy-freely", because it is not copy-protected.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 1,670
    win 10
       #5

    dsperber said:
    sdowney717 said:
    I was thinking if I had to reinstall windows, I could then keep those from being deleted, since everything in windows folder would be gone.
    What is the nature of the WTV recordings you currently have 1/2 TB of? If they are TV recordings from your cable company, and are copy-protected (which almost all are depending on your cable provider), you will LOSE THEM ALL if you reinstall Windows. This isn't because they got deleted, but because the DRM (digital rights management) encryption of those copy-protected WTV recordings can only be played back by WMC running on the exact same installed Windows that did the recording in the first place. Installing a new Windows creates a new encryption/decryption key which is 100% useless for your old copy-protected WTV recordings. Period.

    Now as far as simply getting them off of C, you really should probably have a second drive for "data". You than just define this second location to be part of the "recorded TV" folder structure for WMC, for playback. This "recorded TV LIBRARY" can be one or more folders (which will automatically get named "\Recorded TV" and that you can't change) spread across one or more drives.

    In contrast you can only have one "primary recording" folder (also named "\Recorded TV") which is somewhere on some drive. There is no "pool" of multiple folders available for recording, as there is available for playback. So if available space in that one recording folder (on that one drive) becomes an issue, you will need to manually move WTV recordings to some other one or more "playback folders" yourself in order to free up space for new recordings in the one-and-only "recording folder".

    That's why it's recommended to have almost a dedicated large-capacity drive (with good performance, so large cache and SATA-III and 7200rpm) for your "recording folder" which by definition is also your first "primary playback folder". This ensures you won't run out of room making new recordings. If things get critical (e.g. during the two weeks of Olympics recordings, when HD recording is almost continuous and possibly from multiple channels), you need to also have extensive secondary "playback folders" capacity, and manually move (with Windows Explorer or whatever) your recordings so that you still have them for eventual playback but still have available capacity for new ongoing recordings.

    NOTE: since \Recorded TV is in the root of a drive, you can only have one of these folders per drive. So if you need enormous capacity you need multiple drives, one "dedicated" for new recording, and one or more in the "playback" LIBRARY pool, each drive containing one \Recorded TV folder.

    Nevertheless... if you have copy-protected content, you WILL LOSE USABLE PLAYBACK ACCESS TO IT if you install a new Windows. Period. On the other hand, if this content is copy-freely content (either OTA/ATSC or delivered copy-freely by your cable system) then you can do whatever you want with no restrictions at all. That's why it's called "copy-freely", because it is not copy-protected.
    excellent post
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 705
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #6

    They are all copy free OTA recordings.
    I have two 1TB drives in the HTPC. Both fairly full. Both are SATA 3.
    ASFAIK reinstalling windows wipes the windows folder?
    So then the idea of moving already recorded TV out of the windows folder, so they can be kept.

    I seem to recall you can tell where WMC can put recorded TV. Which is what I did when I added the second 1 TB drive.
    But anyway right now I am past any immediate crisis of reinstalling windows, but it is likely to happen again to me someday.

    Maybe a better idea would be to have had 3 drives in the HTPC, and just use one small drive for the OS.
    That way having to rearrange the OS is less of a hassle regarding your data.
      My Computer


 

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