If you have a stand alone bootable Windows partition manager that does the same - that's also fine - you will need to change the UUIDS unless you are removing the original disk. Works with all windows file systems as well - note the fat32 partition (the EFI partition) on windows will probably be labelled(the flags) msftdata or similar The gparted GUI looks like this (I'm using a Linux laptop currently but the stand alone GPARTED has identical GUI very similar to standard partition managers. do it one at a timeĤ) on the target disk select paste into the spare area - again one partition at a time -you can also change size of target partition(s) - smaller if data fits or biggerĥ) change UUID of all target disk partitions (just right mouse click on the partition and select change uuid)Ħ) boot up now FREE MACRIUM stand alone version and run the Fix Windows boot problems(select target drive) Rufus is a good Windows tool for creating bootable media from an iso.Ģ) create new partition table on target device (also ensure GPT when creating partition table) -> Select Device from the menu and choose create partition table.ģ) on each partition on source drive select copy. The easiest way to achieve what I think what you want to do (and should save a clean install)ġ) downoad and create bootable version of GPARTED and boot - GUI interface very similar to standard partition managers. So long as the old HDD can be read (you don't have to boot it) then :
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