Taking the Pain Out of PC Moving Day

Thu Jan 31, 2008 8:23AM EST

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Tolstoy was talking about families when he wrote about unhappy people, but it could have easily applied to moving from an old PC to a new one. Each of us is unhappy in our own way.

Dory Devlin has a good summary of the basics in her post on moving your PC. I'll try and share a bit of some of the specific things that have worked for me and might work for you. I just moved from an old Windows XP to a new Vista machine (yes, I know—had I moved to a Mac things would be perfect by now, but I'd have nothing to write about).

  1. Make a list of every single program on your old computer. Moving has become interesting now that we have widgets and gadgets as well as programs. I like to go to the Control Panel/Add or Remove Programs in Windows XP. It provides a list of every program I've installed and gives me some inkling (though far from perfect) about how often I've used the program. Like my closets, things I never use get tossed. Lifehacker suggests using an audit program like Belarc.
  2. Windows Transfer—a migration tool from XP to Vista—does reasonably well at detecting movies, photos, files, and music, and moving them. It even does pretty well on detecting your settings and options for everything from display resolution to Internet bookmarks, but it's not perfect and it is detailed. Here's a good tutorial on how to use it. The most definitive document I've seen about what settings will transfer to Vista and what won't is on the Vistaheads website. My preferred method of moving files is to use a device called the Data Tornado—a cable with transfer software built right in—because it makes things fast and easy, but it misses some things,too. Because of versioning and moving to different operating systems, I strongly suggest downloading things like iTunes, Skype, BlackBerry desktop, and others directly to the new machine and then moving your files with contacts, music, and what have you.
  3. If you have DVD-based software like Microsoft Office you need to reinstall the disks. Make sure you have the long (for Office it's 25 numbers and letters) ID number handy. Have someone sit next to you and read them aloud. Your chance of going it solo and not making a transcription error is slim.
  4. Don't be fooled into thinking that PCs remember your password when you click the option box "remember password." They only remember your password until you move to a new machine. I had over 200 passwords stored in Outlook and I was still missing some. From airline and travel passwords, to clothing, books, and beauty it was a shocker to find out I'd neglected to record every password I needed. I used my old machine to log into the account and then ask them to send me an email with my password. Now I'm promising myself that I'll keep better lists.
  5. Want to take your bookmarks and other settings with you without using the File Transfer Wizard? Go to your hard drive and click on Documents and Settings/Username and then Favorites (or another folder for other settings). Copy the Favorites (or other) folder to a flash drive or the network. Then copy it to your new PC under the same Documents and Settings/Username/Favorites directory.
  6. Mostly I learned that moving PCs is a process, not a one-time move. Two weeks into it and I'm still trotting back to the old one for a missing link here and there. I think I'll make a clean break today.

Do you have other pain-killing tips for moving from one PC to another? I'm all ears.

 

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  • 1 Posted by lakerslive2004 on Thu Jan 31, 2008 6:55PM EST Report Abuse

    I think you mean the Microsoft Office "disc" not "disk." There is a difference.

  • 2 Posted by richcunard on Thu Jan 31, 2008 6:55PM EST Report Abuse

    The pain, suffering, and time required for migrating programs, files, settings, etc. to a new PC results in my putting off buying a new PC until I absolutely have to. Which means every 4-5 years or longer. If you really wanted to increase sales of PCs significantly, someone at MS or Intel should devise an easy upgrade process so that I didn't have to spend a week or more setting up the new machine, loading in software that is 4,5, or more versions old and then downloading all the patches, updates, etc. If I didn't have to go through this process, I'd probably buy a new machine every couple of years. That was one of the great things about DOS back in the day. It was relatively easy to transfer all your programs and files from your old computer to the new one. Although setting up your printer drivers, etc was a pain.

  • 3 Posted by carolm_m on Thu Jan 31, 2008 7:01PM EST Report Abuse

    This came at the right time for me. I'm planning on moving to a laptop. Now thanks to you I can move with confidence. The only difference is I plan on sticking with XP. The only thing that excites me about Microsoft's new releases is Office 2007. If it will run well with XP I'll be a happy camper.

  • 4 Posted by paul_soares on Thu Jan 31, 2008 8:50PM EST Report Abuse

    I do about 4 or 5 of these a week and, depending on your setup, can be a daunting DIY project with *potentially* dire consequences if you do something wrong. Thus, I recommend hiring a professional. If you absolutely must go it alone then the first thing to consider is buying an external USB drive and back up your old PC to it, in full, so that you have a COPY of your data to work with so as not to disturb your original data. Most newer drives come with backup software to help you get started as soon as you plug it in. They will typically automatically choose common program and data locations such as \My Documents and Outlook Express but you may have to tell it to grab such things as Quicken data, AOL data, etc.. Getting the data OFF the old PC is only 1/3rd of the battle! The real fun begins getting the data ONTO the new PC, particularly if you're moving up to Vista from XP (or earlier). The final battle is personalizing the new rig to behave sorta like the old one...this battle can drag on for WEEKS!

  • 5 Posted by ytech_robinraskin on Thu Jan 31, 2008 10:55PM EST Report Abuse

    Disk vs. disc. You forced me to the dictionary. According to Merriam Webster they somewhat interchangeable, but it seems that the computer media is disk, not disc. Definition #4 4: a thin circular object: as usually disc : a phonograph record b: a round flat plate coated with a magnetic substance on which data for a computer is stored usually disc : optical disk : as (1): videodisc (2): cd A disc refers to the shape (so it's not totally incorrect) and a disk refers to a computer media (more correct). Anyone feel like chiming in?

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