- Local time
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- Messages
- 353
Is it possible?
It's well-known, clean install is best choice.
Well, these Windows 7 PCs are old, to activate Windows 7 key is NOT a problem. but to activate Office licenses will see a big problem. some old Office licenses (2007, 2010/3), likely need to phone call-in to activate one-by-one.
I am wondering if it is feasible to transfer it from SATA SSD to NVMe SSD. Present Windows 7 OS is missing NVMe driver (Windows 10/11 no this issue)
If the Windows 7 install was using SIW2's media, which contained NVMe driver, does the transfer still have the problem or not?
It's well-known, clean install is best choice.
Well, these Windows 7 PCs are old, to activate Windows 7 key is NOT a problem. but to activate Office licenses will see a big problem. some old Office licenses (2007, 2010/3), likely need to phone call-in to activate one-by-one.
I am wondering if it is feasible to transfer it from SATA SSD to NVMe SSD. Present Windows 7 OS is missing NVMe driver (Windows 10/11 no this issue)
If the Windows 7 install was using SIW2's media, which contained NVMe driver, does the transfer still have the problem or not?
My Computers
-
At a glance
Windows 7 Pro 64-bitI7-970032 GB- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
- HP Elite 800 G5
- OS
- Windows 7 Pro 64-bit
- CPU
- I7-9700
- Memory
- 32 GB
-
At a glance
Windows 7 Pro 64-bit- Computer type
- Laptop
- System Manufacturer/Model Number
- ASUS UX305C
- OS
- Windows 7 Pro 64-bit
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