I remember those days of the slide rule when I was at university in 1957 to 61. But there were good sides to it too. We can put numbers together in our head. The kids need at least a tablet for that.
I was trying to make it a bit easier for you by suggesting the Paragon Tool. Else you have to make the SSD alignment, partition allocation and Windows settings all manually. And there is ample room to make mistakes.
But if your goal is to learn, then mistakes help in that process. Just take one small step after another. We'll be glad to help you.
Back to the subject:
Once you have the default locations of your user folders back on C, check whether the amount of data does not exceed the capacity of your future SSD. If that were the case, you have to move the data to D first - the way I described above.
I was trying to make it a bit easier for you by suggesting the Paragon Tool. Else you have to make the SSD alignment, partition allocation and Windows settings all manually. And there is ample room to make mistakes.
But if your goal is to learn, then mistakes help in that process. Just take one small step after another. We'll be glad to help you.
Back to the subject:
Once you have the default locations of your user folders back on C, check whether the amount of data does not exceed the capacity of your future SSD. If that were the case, you have to move the data to D first - the way I described above.
My Computer
At a glance
Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- HP, Dell, Gateway, Toshiba - 4 laptops and 2 desktops
- OS
- Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
- CPU
- from 1.6GHz Duo to i7
- Monitor(s) Displays
- 2x HP w2207
- Hard Drives
- 5x HDD, 7x SSD, 12x Externals
- Keyboard
- with trackball - no mices
- Mouse
- Trackball mice
- Internet Speed
- DSL 6000