But if their is an operating system on the hard drive, and you try to boot from the hard drive, it will mess up the windows installation on the hard drive.
yes. Just plug in the drive and get your BIOS to detect it...
If this old HDD was used for windows before, then a windows (or linux) computer shopuld be able to acess it.
But if it was a linux drive... windows don't stand a chance
This is how I transfered my files when I upgraded my PC... wasn't a problem
yes. Just plug in the drive and get your BIOS to detect it...
If this old HDD was used for windows before, then a windows (or linux) computer shopuld be able to acess it.
But if it was a linux drive... windows don't stand a chance
This is how I transfered my files when I upgraded my PC... wasn't a problem
Yes. Once winXP can bood on the new drive, just install the other one as the slave and get the BIOS to recognise it. Then you should be able to pull all the data off it in windows (the one saved on your new drive)
Yes. Once winXP can bood on the new drive, just install the other one as the slave and get the BIOS to recognise it. Then you should be able to pull all the data off it in windows (the one saved on your new drive)
I shouldn't think there would be a problem... in "My Computer" and new storage device should appear, (though I'm not an expert on those OSes, It should work OK)