Hello,
I'm kind of guessing that the procedure will be something like the following:
- Remove the laptop battery, remove the HDD. Install the SSD, hopefully the connector will be the same, close up the laptop and reinstall the battery.
- During laptop boot, press F11 (or whatever key) to enter the boot configuration, select recover (hopefully it has a from flash option). This will recover Windows 10 to the new SSD?
After it is recovered I will be able to boot the laptop into Windows 10 (on the SSD).
Am I close?
Hello,
I find this thread interesting. I just got a new 2016 HP laptop with Windows 10 and an i7 that I use as my new secondary, test, computer. I've been toying with the idea of switching to an SSD because of the performance improvements people mention. I wonder if someone could give a brief overview of the procedure for switching from an HDD to SSD, mentioning any pitfalls that might be encountered – definitely not a step-by-step procedure, just an overview.
For example, the laptop contains a 1 TB HDD. I will essentially just be swapping this for an SSD.
- Does the SSD have the same form factor as the HDD and will it mount inside the laptop? Do I need to get a specific form factor SSD?
- Windows 10 came preinstalled on the laptop. I have no Windows 10 disks, but I made the Recovery flash drive including the system files. Will I be able to use this to install a fresh copy of Windows 10 on the SSD. I don't care about any other files. I will reinstall the other stuff.
I'm kind of guessing that the procedure will be something like the following:
- Remove the laptop battery, remove the HDD. Install the SSD, hopefully the connector will be the same, close up the laptop and reinstall the battery.
- During laptop boot, press F11 (or whatever key) to enter the boot configuration, select recover (hopefully it has a from flash option). This will recover Windows 10 to the new SSD?
After it is recovered I will be able to boot the laptop into Windows 10 (on the SSD).
Am I close?
Thanks,
Barry.
@ilan, in general. As of 2016, there is no difference in terms of performance between having 8 or 16 gigabytes of RAM.
Up to 1400MB/s sequential read and up to 1000MB/s sequential write speeds.
As of 2016, there is no difference in terms of performance between having 8 or 16 gigabytes of RAM
don't forget to make a boot-up video, i would like to see the difference
@ilan, in general. As of 2016, there is no difference in terms of performance between having 8 or 16 gigabytes of RAM.
Mike, I'm only referring to my personal experience. Nevertheless, I will rephrase it in a better way:Sorry, I disagree! I notice a big difference.
As of 2016, after upgrading my PC from 8 to 16 gigabytes of RAM, I notice no difference in terms of performance.
I believe the "problem" was that my PC was already fast enough.
Core i7 @ 3.40 GhZ
nVIDIA GTX 760
Win10 64bit
I guess I haven't yet put my PC under such a heavy load that I would notice the difference. I usually avoid multitasking at all costs."Fast enough" is one thing, "doing more" is another. I often have several memory hungry apps running at once. This obviously benefits from more ram. I went from 8 to 16gb in my Windows PC (similar spec to yours) and noticed an immediate improvement.
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