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|    alt.comp.os.windows-10    |    Steaming pile of horseshit Windows 10    |    197,590 messages    |
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|    Message 196,353 of 197,590    |
|    Steve to Brian Gregory    |
|    Re: switching to solid state drive    |
|    21 Dec 25 14:38:09    |
      From: tlswilso@aol.com              On 12/20/2025 5:26 PM, Brian Gregory wrote:       > On 19/12/2025 06:29, Steve wrote:       >> I haven't been here in ages. It looks like there are still people here       >> who can help with problems.       >>       >> My computer is at least 15 years old. It was upgraded to Windows 10       >> soon after it was available. I want to keep this computer going. (It       >> can't be upgraded to Windows 11.) Once or twice a month it bogs down       >> and needs to be restarted. It can take more than a few minutes before       >> it gets back up to speed.       >>       >> For a long time, I wanted to switch over to a solid state drive. I       >> finally bought one a couple of months ago and finally got around to       >> installing it last week. my current hard drive is a 1 terabyte Western       >> Digital. The new drive is a Samsung SATA 2.5 inch 1 TB drive.       >>       >> I downloaded the Samsung Magician software to transfer to the new       >> drive. When I went to use it, it showed my current drive as the source       >> drive and prompted me install the Samsung SSD drive. It was already       >> there. After a couple of tries, I unhooke3d the ssd and plugged it in       >> when prompted. Nothing.       >>       >> Thinking maybe a cable wasn't working, I shut it down and swapped the       >> power and data wires between the 2 drives. It started right up as       >> usual and the ssd still wasn't recognized. When I'm starting the       >> computer, if I watch the screen, I see it identify my old drive "WD...       >> (whatever)", then right below that I see "ssd EVO 870" which is       >> exactly what the new drive is. So it recognizes that the new ssd is       >> there, but it does not show up anywhere in File Explorer.       >>       >> So do I give up and consider the new ssd a waste of time and money?       >> Can anyone think of a work around to make this work?       >       > Well it's a new unformatted SSD.       >       > More importantly, can the software you're planning to use to clone all       > the partitions on your old drive, see the new drive?       >              No, neither the software (Samsung Magician) nor my computer can see the       new SSD. Someone earlier asked what it shows on Disk Management. I looked.       It says Disk 0 Basic 931.32 GB Online. Then the next box shows 931.32 GB       Unallocated.              So Disk Management knows it's there. Now I need to know how to format it       and give it a drive number.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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