"Belprice" <Belprice@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:469451D8-4E02-485F-8552-99257928B91F@microsoft.com...
> 1) I have a serious problem with space on my main network computer at home
> and I was wondering if its possible to transfer larger files and folders
from
> this computer to the second computer on my wireless home network. . . ..
> I know nothing about home networks , but just about managed to follow the
> instructions and set one up. I noticed that I can now share files ect ,
but I
> want to know if I can access the downstairs computers files and documents
> folders and move larger files between the two computers.
Ease of doing this depends on your operating system, shared
drives (essential) and file permissions (optional.) In a stable home
network you should have no trouble loading quite large files (e.g.
pictures, music, accounts) from PC#1 and writing them to PC#2.
> Also, is there any
> way I can strip the downstairs computer down to the bare minuim and make
more
> space available on this computer.
Yes, this is nowadays easy, not least because high-capacity
hard drives are so cheap. A different option (without networking)
is to buy a "portable" USB drive, back up onto it everything from
both PC#1 and PC#2, then and then read from the USB drive
whatever you need.
> 2) I would also like to know if its possible for me to transfer all my
> documents and settings from my old hard drive to a new larger hard drive.
If
> I can do this , what is the best way to do this and after i have copied
all
> the files, settings and folder to the new drive , can I just replace the
old
> drive with the new drive , pop it into my computer and start up windows
Certain drive vendors have free software for just this purpose.
I used Western Digital software to clone everything from the
old hard drive to a new WD larger drive (installed inside the
PC on the other IDE channel) then reset the BIOS to
boot from the new larger drive, then reformat the old smaller
drive to use for additional storage space. This works trouble-free
only in the same single PC. (WinXP attempts to prevent your
booting PC#2 on a drive taken from PC#1.)
--
Don Phillipson
Carlsbad Springs
(Ottawa, Canada)
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