Transfer Files From Your PC Really Old

Rosalyn want to move data from computer 14 years, 98 Windows into a brand new one. That’s the challenge. The technology used to move files back and forth between the computer has changed drastically since then. In those days, fast cash loans you can be connected to a PC with a special parallel cable, but PC is not done in parallel. Your old PC may have a USB port, but if not, USB 1.

1, which is very slow to move files. Speaking from a PC floppy drive, a very slow time is not much choice, either. True, you can buy an external USB floppy drive to a new computer, but moving large amounts of data on slower disks, 1. 4 GB hard will feel like your car moving from one city to another by taking it apart and bring each piece individually in the foot. And unlike your new computer, a long time most likely you can read but not write, CD.

Both computers have ethernet ports as possible, show that you can get them working together on a network. But I will be honest here: I have created a network in Windows 98, and never tried to set it up with Windows 7. From what I read, get the two to play nice with each other may not be easy for the inexperienced. That’s why I suggest you remove the hard drive from old computer and attach them to the new one. But even then you have a problem.

A hard drive is 14 years old who may be using an IDE connection; accept modern PC drives with SATA ports. The solution is to buy something like the Bytecc USB 2. 0 to IDE / SATA Adapter Kit. It effectively turns an internal hard drive – IDE or SATA – into an external USB drive. You remove the drive from the old computer, plug it into your adapter, then plug the adapter into a new computer – you do not even have to open.

One bit of advice: If you use a Bytecc kit, plug the power adapter to the drive, not for Bytecc it. Contributing Editor Lincoln Spector writes about technology and cinemas. Email your questions to him in technologynswer@pcworld. com, or post them to a community of people helping in the forum PCW Answer Line. Follow Lincoln on Twitter, or subscribing to newsletters Answer Line, e-mail weekly.

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