Hi all,
   I haven't been here in a couple of years. IT's great to see some
familiar names posting. Cheers to all.

   I have a laptop running Win 10 with no (working) DVD/CDROM. For various
reasons I want to move from a 10 year old laptop drive to a new SSD and am
looking for guidance on I might do that. Win 10 is properly licensed but
through a weird channel - it was Win 7 that M$ allowed to convert to Win 10
for free and I'm nervous that if the hard drive died I'd have to purchase a
new license as the free conversion path likely doesn't exist anymore.

   Both drives are nominally 500GB.

   The older hard drive fdisk info shows:

root@science:~# fdisk --list /dev/sde
Disk /dev/sde: 465.8 GiB, 500107862016 bytes, 976773168 sectors
Disk model: ASM1053E
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disklabel type: dos
Disk identifier: 0xe0c5913d

Device     Boot     Start       End   Sectors   Size Id Type
/dev/sde1              63  45062324  45062262  21.5G 1c Hidden W95 FAT32
(LBA)
/dev/sde2  *     45062325 288063133 243000809 115.9G  7 HPFS/NTFS/exFAT
/dev/sde3       288063488 289247231   1183744   578M 27 Hidden NTFS WinRE
/dev/sde4       289249254 976768064 687518811 327.9G fd Linux raid
autodetect
root@science:~#

The Linux RAID autodetect is from running Gentoo at some earlier time and
probably doesn't need to be copied. I'm not at all sure what /dev/sde3 is
or whether it's required to make M$ happy.

   The new SSD is unused and shows:

root@science:~# fdisk --list /dev/sdf
Disk /dev/sdf: 465.8 GiB, 500107862016 bytes, 976773168 sectors
Disk model: ASM1053E
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 4096 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4096 bytes / 4096 bytes
root@science:~#

   The appear to have the same sector count and overall size.

   I can make a 1TB drive available in my big machine and work over USB
(which is what I'm doing to get the info above) but I'm unclear how much of
this can be done automatically and how much I might need to do by hand.

   As long as I don't hurt the old drive I can put data on the SSD multiple
times to get through the process in case I have trouble.

   Does anyone have experience with this sort of issue and can you point me
toward some instructions I might try?

Thanks,
Mark

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