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#1
Pulling my hair out... nothing works to clone a new drive in laptop
First, I HATE Microsoft. There, I said it. NOT ONE of their tech or "how to" articles has ever worked. Not a single one, and their tutorials on backup and restore are no different.
I recently bought a Samsung 250 GB SSD to put in my Dell XPS-17 to speed it up. The OEM drive is a Toshiba 500 GB HD, but is much less than half full. All I want to do is make an exact copy of the drive onto the new hard drive and then use my old drive (the laptop has two internal drive bays) to store files while the new drive runs the OS and programs. Seems like a simple request, right? Yeah, I thought so too....
The Samsung comes with their own software that promises to let you clone the drive. Well, they lied. Their software points you to their website, where you can download a copy of Norton Ghost. Great, I thought, that should take care of it.... well, not so fast. Seems Samsung failed to include the license key with Ghost, and without the key, Ghost will not clone the drive. Thanks for nothing, Samsung.
I have a WD passport drive that has its own software for maintaining a backup. Well, I found out that was about worthless too. I had it set to "Category" backup, and because it wasn't on "File" backup, it will only restore my files to a new folder on the new drive after I install Windows on that drive. That means that none of my settings or programs are there. What a waste of time. I have now changed it to "File" backup and have to wait several hours while it completes that before I can try it again and see if it will restore all my files, programs, and settings. I have my doubts.
So I started to research other options. First on my list was making a complete system image with the built in Win 7 backup and restore utility. Several hours later, the image complete (on an external drive), I installed the new SSD in the primary slot and the laptop and installed a fresh copy of Win 7 Pro 64. After that was done, I tried to restore, only to discover Microsoft's lie. You cannot reach a USB drive in order to find the backup copy to restore from. So, I installed the original HD in the secondary laptop slot and copied the image file from my external drive over to the HD. A couple hours later and that was done, and then I rebooted only to discover that not only can Windows not find an external USB drive, it can't even find the backup copy in the secondary (original HDD) drive slot. What the hell good is making a complete drive image if you can never find the damned thing to restore from? This is 131 GB of data, and at 4.7GB per DVD, it would take me 28 DVDs to make a complete image. I'm not going to do that. Microsoft, you suck.
Does ANYONE know of any actual way to completely clone a drive. I'm talking boot sector and all. I want to just be able to swap the new drive over after cloning and have it boot up as if nothing had changed. Microsoft clearly doesn't know how to do this. Does anyone else?