Re: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-25 Thread DSinc

Thanks Steve,
You focus on mymain quibble of conversion to SSD.
I know that windows 'likes toboot' from C:\windows (using boot.ini, 
ntldr, and ?).

Yes, that is as far as I know ATM.  So, I am stuck with OP's ideas to learn
truly what is going on.  NO! I do not expect M$ to help; so I continue 
with
whatever I can gleen from this LIST.  Let's just say I am still confused 
also.
Yes, I keep reading about 'imaging' stuff/partitions. I donot have a 
storage of dot-img files.

I just do not get it...yet!
sorry.
Duncan

On 05/17/2013 20:47, Steve Tomporowski wrote:
Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then booted. 
Some things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed. I 
have found out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches 
failed.  Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design 
review coming up at work, I was too buys obsessing about that to work 
on it.  Today, a day off!  I decided to look into the errors. Ran 
update again, same problems.  Searching on the errors, it seemed to 
indicate that Update has a problem when you move stuff from C: 
somewhere else, like when you install an SSD.  The only thing I really 
fudged with there is that I moved the Temp and Tmp folders. I moved 
them back, same problem.  I wondered if I didn't do something else and 
forgot about it.  Back to System and Advanced Settings.  This time I 
looked a the lower half of the window.  Half of my windows variables 
were pointing to my old boot drive which is now E: !  When I booted to 
the SSD the first time, I kept the old boot drive in the system, just 
changed the boot order in the BIOS. Wrong!  Windows apparently got 
confused and I ended up with a mishmash.  My %systemroot% was now E 
instead of C!


Just a word of caution.  Going to clone the drive again (it wouldn't 
boot properly on it's own) and this time remove the old drive. Well, 
that's how ya learn


Steve





Re: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-25 Thread Steve Tomporowski

Duncan,

Did you read my email on how I fixed this?  Sent to the list last 
weekend.  Things are going fine for a week now and I do have stuff that 
is starting very fast.  My system used to take a long time from password 
prompt to usable desktop.  There was a lot going on in the background 
which I'm sure what it was, but right now, from password prompt to 
usable desktop is about 10 seconds.  I'm also not going to worry a whole 
lot about writing to the SSD.  I've changed where downloaded files go 
and the defaults for documents, but if you do too much fiddling, then 
Windows Update will have a fit.


Steve

On 5/25/2013 3:23 PM, DSinc wrote:

Thanks Steve,
You focus on mymain quibble of conversion to SSD.
I know that windows 'likes toboot' from C:\windows (using boot.ini, 
ntldr, and ?).
Yes, that is as far as I know ATM.  So, I am stuck with OP's ideas to 
learn
truly what is going on.  NO! I do not expect M$ to help; so I 
continue with
whatever I can gleen from this LIST.  Let's just say I am still 
confused also.
Yes, I keep reading about 'imaging' stuff/partitions. I donot have a 
storage of dot-img files.

I just do not get it...yet!
sorry.
Duncan

On 05/17/2013 20:47, Steve Tomporowski wrote:
Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then booted. 
Some things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed. I 
have found out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches 
failed.  Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design 
review coming up at work, I was too buys obsessing about that to work 
on it.  Today, a day off!  I decided to look into the errors. Ran 
update again, same problems.  Searching on the errors, it seemed to 
indicate that Update has a problem when you move stuff from C: 
somewhere else, like when you install an SSD.  The only thing I 
really fudged with there is that I moved the Temp and Tmp folders. I 
moved them back, same problem.  I wondered if I didn't do something 
else and forgot about it.  Back to System and Advanced Settings.  
This time I looked a the lower half of the window. Half of my windows 
variables were pointing to my old boot drive which is now E: !  When 
I booted to the SSD the first time, I kept the old boot drive in the 
system, just changed the boot order in the BIOS. Wrong!  Windows 
apparently got confused and I ended up with a mishmash.  My 
%systemroot% was now E instead of C!


Just a word of caution.  Going to clone the drive again (it wouldn't 
boot properly on it's own) and this time remove the old drive. Well, 
that's how ya learn


Steve







Re: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-25 Thread DSinc

Steve,
Yes, I did read your share of 05/18. I do read your 8 steps. But, your 
entire share is on a level
that I do not share. So, I still read it to decode (as best I can) it 
for my future tasks.
Yes, I can mechanically install an SSD in my 'test' machine. Yes, I can 
electrically connect

the SSD to my PSU.  Beyond this I am still a large bit lost.
Sorry. Yes, still using WinXPpro ATM.
Duncan

On 05/25/2013 15:38, Steve Tomporowski wrote:

Duncan,

Did you read my email on how I fixed this?  Sent to the list last 
weekend.  Things are going fine for a week now and I do have stuff 
that is starting very fast.  My system used to take a long time from 
password prompt to usable desktop.  There was a lot going on in the 
background which I'm sure what it was, but right now, from password 
prompt to usable desktop is about 10 seconds.  I'm also not going to 
worry a whole lot about writing to the SSD.  I've changed where 
downloaded files go and the defaults for documents, but if you do too 
much fiddling, then Windows Update will have a fit.


Steve

On 5/25/2013 3:23 PM, DSinc wrote:

Thanks Steve,
You focus on mymain quibble of conversion to SSD.
I know that windows 'likes toboot' from C:\windows (using boot.ini, 
ntldr, and ?).
Yes, that is as far as I know ATM.  So, I am stuck with OP's ideas to 
learn
truly what is going on.  NO! I do not expect M$ to help; so I 
continue with
whatever I can gleen from this LIST.  Let's just say I am still 
confused also.
Yes, I keep reading about 'imaging' stuff/partitions. I donot have a 
storage of dot-img files.

I just do not get it...yet!
sorry.
Duncan

On 05/17/2013 20:47, Steve Tomporowski wrote:
Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then booted. 
Some things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed. I 
have found out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches 
failed.  Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design 
review coming up at work, I was too buys obsessing about that to 
work on it.  Today, a day off!  I decided to look into the errors. 
Ran update again, same problems.  Searching on the errors, it seemed 
to indicate that Update has a problem when you move stuff from C: 
somewhere else, like when you install an SSD. The only thing I 
really fudged with there is that I moved the Temp and Tmp folders. I 
moved them back, same problem.  I wondered if I didn't do something 
else and forgot about it. Back to System and Advanced Settings.  
This time I looked a the lower half of the window. Half of my 
windows variables were pointing to my old boot drive which is now E: 
!  When I booted to the SSD the first time, I kept the old boot 
drive in the system, just changed the boot order in the BIOS. Wrong! 
Windows apparently got confused and I ended up with a mishmash.  My 
%systemroot% was now E instead of C!


Just a word of caution.  Going to clone the drive again (it wouldn't 
boot properly on it's own) and this time remove the old drive. Well, 
that's how ya learn


Steve










Re: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-18 Thread Steve Tomporowski
Understood that a fresh install will align everything for the fastest 
performance.  However, Windows here just made sure that it loaded 
everything from the old drive. For some reason, it never bothered trying 
to load Windows from the SSD.


On 5/17/2013 9:06 PM, Dave Gibney wrote:

My laptop drive was giving me signs of eminent failure. I has a local guy
install a SAMSUG SSD and clone to it. It worked, but I wasn't happy with all
the results.
The next weekend, I did a fresh install Win-7 Ultimate, Office 2010, etc.
Cycling through all the updates and getting the drivers up to date took a
while, but no real problems.

It is much faster on boot and the quiet is scary :)

-Original Message-
From: hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
[mailto:hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Steve
Tomporowski
Sent: Friday, May 17, 2013 5:48 PM
To: hardw...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
Subject: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then booted. Some
things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed.  I have found
out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches failed.
Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design review coming up at
work, I was too buys obsessing about that to work on it.  Today, a day off!
I decided to look into the errors. Ran update again, same problems.
Searching on the errors, it seemed to indicate that Update has a problem
when you move stuff from C: somewhere else, like when you install an SSD.
The only thing I really fudged with there is that I moved the Temp and Tmp
folders. I moved them back, same problem.  I wondered if I didn't do
something else and forgot about it.  Back to System and Advanced Settings.
This time I looked a the lower half of the window.  Half of my windows
variables were pointing to my old boot drive which is now E: !  When I
booted to the SSD the first time, I kept the old boot drive in the system,
just changed the boot order in the BIOS. Wrong!  Windows apparently got
confused and I ended up with a mishmash.  My %systemroot% was now E instead
of C!

Just a word of caution.  Going to clone the drive again (it wouldn't boot
properly on it's own) and this time remove the old drive. Well, that's how
ya learn

Steve





Re: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-18 Thread DSinc

Steve,
Thanks for the view of your conversion/installation. You have 
demonstrated my biggest fear of
moving forward until I create a roadmap of How to... with what to use, 
why use it, what to expect.
It has been 4 years since I have built a PC from scratch.  I recall in 
the good-ole-days, we all used
a program post Format to set a Primary, Active partition. All other 
partitions were set to Extended NTFS.
Sadly, I have forgotten the name of this program and don't even know if 
I still have it archived.
Now I just use the Windows install media to create (I believe?) the 
'new' initial Primary and Active
partition and then use the Disk Manager in the Administrative tools post 
install to add/shape the remaining

partitions.
It does seem to me that you could possibly edit your boot.ini file to 
point Windows back to whichever drive you choose to

boot from. I have done this in the dim past with some success.
From your decription, Your old EM drive is/was your %SystemRoot%; and, 

it contained partitions c:\ and d:\. And,
I read that your new SSD is now e:\. Am I correct?
Otherwise, I am very confused!
Duncan


On 05/18/2013 07:03, Steve Tomporowski wrote:
Understood that a fresh install will align everything for the fastest 
performance.  However, Windows here just made sure that it loaded 
everything from the old drive. For some reason, it never bothered 
trying to load Windows from the SSD.


On 5/17/2013 9:06 PM, Dave Gibney wrote:
My laptop drive was giving me signs of eminent failure. I has a local 
guy
install a SAMSUG SSD and clone to it. It worked, but I wasn't happy 
with all

the results.
The next weekend, I did a fresh install Win-7 Ultimate, Office 2010, 
etc.
Cycling through all the updates and getting the drivers up to date 
took a

while, but no real problems.

It is much faster on boot and the quiet is scary :)

-Original Message-
From: hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
[mailto:hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Steve
Tomporowski
Sent: Friday, May 17, 2013 5:48 PM
To: hardw...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
Subject: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then booted. Some
things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed.  I have 
found

out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches failed.
Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design review coming 
up at
work, I was too buys obsessing about that to work on it.  Today, a 
day off!

I decided to look into the errors. Ran update again, same problems.
Searching on the errors, it seemed to indicate that Update has a problem
when you move stuff from C: somewhere else, like when you install an 
SSD.
The only thing I really fudged with there is that I moved the Temp 
and Tmp

folders. I moved them back, same problem.  I wondered if I didn't do
something else and forgot about it.  Back to System and Advanced 
Settings.

This time I looked a the lower half of the window.  Half of my windows
variables were pointing to my old boot drive which is now E: ! When I
booted to the SSD the first time, I kept the old boot drive in the 
system,

just changed the boot order in the BIOS. Wrong!  Windows apparently got
confused and I ended up with a mishmash.  My %systemroot% was now E 
instead

of C!

Just a word of caution.  Going to clone the drive again (it wouldn't 
boot
properly on it's own) and this time remove the old drive. Well, 
that's how

ya learn

Steve








Re: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-18 Thread Brian Weeden
If anything things have gotten easier. I just built two new systems in the last 
6 months.  A lot of the tweaking needed to get a system running is no longer 
needed.  UEFI is a lot better than the old BIOS.

If you're installing Windows, it does all the partition stuff for you.  If you 
want to do something creative or manual, I suggest getting a program called 
Gparted and putting it on a bootable USB or disc.

If you are upgrading to a new drive, you need to use some cloning software to 
avoid the problems with changing the drive mapping.  I just upgraded to a 
bigger Samsung SSD and it came with cloning software.


Brian

Sent from my iPhone

On May 18, 2013, at 10:12, DSinc dsinc...@epbfi.com wrote:

 Steve,
 Thanks for the view of your conversion/installation. You have demonstrated my 
 biggest fear of
 moving forward until I create a roadmap of How to... with what to use, why 
 use it, what to expect.
 It has been 4 years since I have built a PC from scratch.  I recall in the 
 good-ole-days, we all used
 a program post Format to set a Primary, Active partition. All other 
 partitions were set to Extended NTFS.
 Sadly, I have forgotten the name of this program and don't even know if I 
 still have it archived.
 Now I just use the Windows install media to create (I believe?) the 'new' 
 initial Primary and Active
 partition and then use the Disk Manager in the Administrative tools post 
 install to add/shape the remaining
 partitions.
 It does seem to me that you could possibly edit your boot.ini file to point 
 Windows back to whichever drive you choose to
 boot from. I have done this in the dim past with some success.
 From your decription, Your old EM drive is/was your %SystemRoot%; and, it 
 contained partitions c:\ and d:\. And,
 I read that your new SSD is now e:\. Am I correct?
 Otherwise, I am very confused!
 Duncan
 
 
 On 05/18/2013 07:03, Steve Tomporowski wrote:
 Understood that a fresh install will align everything for the fastest 
 performance.  However, Windows here just made sure that it loaded everything 
 from the old drive. For some reason, it never bothered trying to load 
 Windows from the SSD.
 
 On 5/17/2013 9:06 PM, Dave Gibney wrote:
 My laptop drive was giving me signs of eminent failure. I has a local guy
 install a SAMSUG SSD and clone to it. It worked, but I wasn't happy with all
 the results.
 The next weekend, I did a fresh install Win-7 Ultimate, Office 2010, etc.
 Cycling through all the updates and getting the drivers up to date took a
 while, but no real problems.
 
 It is much faster on boot and the quiet is scary :)
 
 -Original Message-
 From: hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
 [mailto:hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Steve
 Tomporowski
 Sent: Friday, May 17, 2013 5:48 PM
 To: hardw...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
 Subject: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable
 
 Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then booted. Some
 things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed.  I have found
 out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches failed.
 Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design review coming up at
 work, I was too buys obsessing about that to work on it.  Today, a day off!
 I decided to look into the errors. Ran update again, same problems.
 Searching on the errors, it seemed to indicate that Update has a problem
 when you move stuff from C: somewhere else, like when you install an SSD.
 The only thing I really fudged with there is that I moved the Temp and Tmp
 folders. I moved them back, same problem.  I wondered if I didn't do
 something else and forgot about it.  Back to System and Advanced Settings.
 This time I looked a the lower half of the window.  Half of my windows
 variables were pointing to my old boot drive which is now E: ! When I
 booted to the SSD the first time, I kept the old boot drive in the system,
 just changed the boot order in the BIOS. Wrong!  Windows apparently got
 confused and I ended up with a mishmash.  My %systemroot% was now E instead
 of C!
 
 Just a word of caution.  Going to clone the drive again (it wouldn't boot
 properly on it's own) and this time remove the old drive. Well, that's how
 ya learn
 
 Steve
 


Re: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-18 Thread DSinc

Brian,
Thank you for the share, but, I have quibbles.
para1: I will not have the benefits of UEFI bios until I upgrade my 
m/b's to my new Z77 models, along

with their new i5-3570K cpus.

I still run XP on P65 C2D m/b's. So, OLD BIOS. I did try to use AHCI in 
bios when I built these PCs.
It did not work well at all. I backed off to ESDI and have run for the 
past 4yrs w/SATA EM drives and opticals.

And, yes, I have never loaded/used my Asus/JMicron drivers. So, adding an
SSD to my current PCs is confusing. Especially with what Steve is 
dealing with.


para2: I assume that 'gpartd' is an open-source linux program. I do not 
haveit. I am Win-blows locked on

XPpro. Yes, I do have Win7pro for my new(pending) Z77 systems.

para3: Yes, I accept cloning sw to move old sw to new SSD. Yet I am not 
convinced that the cloning sw
included with a Samsung Pro 840 SSD is completely solid, so I remain on 
the fence.

Thanks again for your share,
Duncan

On 05/18/2013 11:14, Brian Weeden wrote:

If anything things have gotten easier. I just built two new systems in the last 
6 months.  A lot of the tweaking needed to get a system running is no longer 
needed.  UEFI is a lot better than the old BIOS.

If you're installing Windows, it does all the partition stuff for you.  If you 
want to do something creative or manual, I suggest getting a program called 
Gparted and putting it on a bootable USB or disc.

If you are upgrading to a new drive, you need to use some cloning software to 
avoid the problems with changing the drive mapping.  I just upgraded to a 
bigger Samsung SSD and it came with cloning software.


Brian

Sent from my iPhone

On May 18, 2013, at 10:12, DSinc dsinc...@epbfi.com wrote:


Steve,
Thanks for the view of your conversion/installation. You have demonstrated my 
biggest fear of
moving forward until I create a roadmap of How to... with what to use, why 
use it, what to expect.
It has been 4 years since I have built a PC from scratch.  I recall in the 
good-ole-days, we all used
a program post Format to set a Primary, Active partition. All other partitions 
were set to Extended NTFS.
Sadly, I have forgotten the name of this program and don't even know if I still 
have it archived.
Now I just use the Windows install media to create (I believe?) the 'new' 
initial Primary and Active
partition and then use the Disk Manager in the Administrative tools post 
install to add/shape the remaining
partitions.
It does seem to me that you could possibly edit your boot.ini file to point 
Windows back to whichever drive you choose to
boot from. I have done this in the dim past with some success.
 From your decription, Your old EM drive is/was your %SystemRoot%; and, it 
contained partitions c:\ and d:\. And,
I read that your new SSD is now e:\. Am I correct?
Otherwise, I am very confused!
Duncan


On 05/18/2013 07:03, Steve Tomporowski wrote:

Understood that a fresh install will align everything for the fastest 
performance.  However, Windows here just made sure that it loaded everything 
from the old drive. For some reason, it never bothered trying to load Windows 
from the SSD.

On 5/17/2013 9:06 PM, Dave Gibney wrote:

My laptop drive was giving me signs of eminent failure. I has a local guy
install a SAMSUG SSD and clone to it. It worked, but I wasn't happy with all
the results.
The next weekend, I did a fresh install Win-7 Ultimate, Office 2010, etc.
Cycling through all the updates and getting the drivers up to date took a
while, but no real problems.

It is much faster on boot and the quiet is scary :)

-Original Message-
From: hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
[mailto:hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Steve
Tomporowski
Sent: Friday, May 17, 2013 5:48 PM
To: hardw...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
Subject: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then booted. Some
things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed.  I have found
out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches failed.
Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design review coming up at
work, I was too buys obsessing about that to work on it.  Today, a day off!
I decided to look into the errors. Ran update again, same problems.
Searching on the errors, it seemed to indicate that Update has a problem
when you move stuff from C: somewhere else, like when you install an SSD.
The only thing I really fudged with there is that I moved the Temp and Tmp
folders. I moved them back, same problem.  I wondered if I didn't do
something else and forgot about it.  Back to System and Advanced Settings.
This time I looked a the lower half of the window.  Half of my windows
variables were pointing to my old boot drive which is now E: ! When I
booted to the SSD the first time, I kept the old boot drive in the system,
just changed the boot order in the BIOS. Wrong!  Windows apparently got
confused and I ended up with a mishmash

Re: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-18 Thread Steve Tomporowski
 
2010, etc.
Cycling through all the updates and getting the drivers up to date 
took a

while, but no real problems.

It is much faster on boot and the quiet is scary :)

-Original Message-
From: hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
[mailto:hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Steve
Tomporowski
Sent: Friday, May 17, 2013 5:48 PM
To: hardw...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
Subject: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then 
booted. Some
things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed.  I 
have found

out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches failed.
Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design review 
coming up at
work, I was too buys obsessing about that to work on it. Today, a 
day off!

I decided to look into the errors. Ran update again, same problems.
Searching on the errors, it seemed to indicate that Update has a 
problem
when you move stuff from C: somewhere else, like when you install 
an SSD.
The only thing I really fudged with there is that I moved the Temp 
and Tmp

folders. I moved them back, same problem.  I wondered if I didn't do
something else and forgot about it.  Back to System and Advanced 
Settings.
This time I looked a the lower half of the window.  Half of my 
windows

variables were pointing to my old boot drive which is now E: ! When I
booted to the SSD the first time, I kept the old boot drive in the 
system,
just changed the boot order in the BIOS. Wrong!  Windows 
apparently got
confused and I ended up with a mishmash.  My %systemroot% was now 
E instead

of C!

Just a word of caution.  Going to clone the drive again (it 
wouldn't boot
properly on it's own) and this time remove the old drive. Well, 
that's how

ya learn

Steve






[H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-17 Thread Steve Tomporowski
Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then booted. Some 
things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed.  I have 
found out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches failed.  
Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design review coming up 
at work, I was too buys obsessing about that to work on it.  Today, a 
day off!  I decided to look into the errors. Ran update again, same 
problems.  Searching on the errors, it seemed to indicate that Update 
has a problem when you move stuff from C: somewhere else, like when you 
install an SSD.  The only thing I really fudged with there is that I 
moved the Temp and Tmp folders. I moved them back, same problem.  I 
wondered if I didn't do something else and forgot about it.  Back to 
System and Advanced Settings.  This time I looked a the lower half of 
the window.  Half of my windows variables were pointing to my old boot 
drive which is now E: !  When I booted to the SSD the first time, I kept 
the old boot drive in the system, just changed the boot order in the 
BIOS. Wrong!  Windows apparently got confused and I ended up with a 
mishmash.  My %systemroot% was now E instead of C!


Just a word of caution.  Going to clone the drive again (it wouldn't 
boot properly on it's own) and this time remove the old drive. Well, 
that's how ya learn


Steve


Re: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

2013-05-17 Thread Dave Gibney
My laptop drive was giving me signs of eminent failure. I has a local guy
install a SAMSUG SSD and clone to it. It worked, but I wasn't happy with all
the results.
The next weekend, I did a fresh install Win-7 Ultimate, Office 2010, etc.
Cycling through all the updates and getting the drivers up to date took a
while, but no real problems.

It is much faster on boot and the quiet is scary :)

-Original Message-
From: hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
[mailto:hardware-boun...@lists.hardwaregroup.com] On Behalf Of Steve
Tomporowski
Sent: Friday, May 17, 2013 5:48 PM
To: hardw...@lists.hardwaregroup.com
Subject: [H] The SSD and how Windows can make your life miserable

Last weekend I cloned my main drive over to an SSD and then booted. Some
things looked faster, but I wasn't blown away by the speed.  I have found
out why.  It began on Patch Tuesday.  4 of 6 patches failed.  
Windows update threw some errors, but as I had a design review coming up at
work, I was too buys obsessing about that to work on it.  Today, a day off!
I decided to look into the errors. Ran update again, same problems.
Searching on the errors, it seemed to indicate that Update has a problem
when you move stuff from C: somewhere else, like when you install an SSD.
The only thing I really fudged with there is that I moved the Temp and Tmp
folders. I moved them back, same problem.  I wondered if I didn't do
something else and forgot about it.  Back to System and Advanced Settings.
This time I looked a the lower half of the window.  Half of my windows
variables were pointing to my old boot drive which is now E: !  When I
booted to the SSD the first time, I kept the old boot drive in the system,
just changed the boot order in the BIOS. Wrong!  Windows apparently got
confused and I ended up with a mishmash.  My %systemroot% was now E instead
of C!

Just a word of caution.  Going to clone the drive again (it wouldn't boot
properly on it's own) and this time remove the old drive. Well, that's how
ya learn

Steve