I need to make provision for the eventuality of a heatwave the likes of which we had last year, which caused many many hard drives of mine to pop, one by one, new and old, and I am lucky to have any data left at the end of it.
As it stands I want to make a clone of my 500Gb C-drive (in which Windows 10 is installed on a 72Mb partition). I donβt know the best way to go about it. Last year I was angry with myself for having everything on the same medium of storage, so I thought this year I ought to use a memory stick. I already have copied, via AEOMEI, all my C-drive files to memory stick but imagine myself struggling to get it all in working order if everything goes belly-up again. Plus, since making the copy, I have new stuff on my browser that I want ready to use. That is why I reckon a clone is the best option.
I envisage a scenario in which my C-drive fails and I have to do a second-generation clone of my C-drive via, perhaps, my laptop, from a memory stick to a new hard drive, operated in a caddy, that will ultimately be used internally.
Either that or presumably I could boot from the memory stick.
I donβt know how this is will work because of such considerations as the file system, which is obviously different for a memory stick. Would I have my whole desktop, browser etc. ready to use just by booting from a memory stick, and with no internal HDDk? I have never booted from a memory stick before.
BTW would a desktop fan, pointed into the open computer, help to stop these HDDs failing? It was the platens that went last year.
I am very open to suggestions as I don;t know whether I am going about this in the right way.
With thanks in advance.
As it stands I want to make a clone of my 500Gb C-drive (in which Windows 10 is installed on a 72Mb partition). I donβt know the best way to go about it. Last year I was angry with myself for having everything on the same medium of storage, so I thought this year I ought to use a memory stick. I already have copied, via AEOMEI, all my C-drive files to memory stick but imagine myself struggling to get it all in working order if everything goes belly-up again. Plus, since making the copy, I have new stuff on my browser that I want ready to use. That is why I reckon a clone is the best option.
I envisage a scenario in which my C-drive fails and I have to do a second-generation clone of my C-drive via, perhaps, my laptop, from a memory stick to a new hard drive, operated in a caddy, that will ultimately be used internally.
Either that or presumably I could boot from the memory stick.
I donβt know how this is will work because of such considerations as the file system, which is obviously different for a memory stick. Would I have my whole desktop, browser etc. ready to use just by booting from a memory stick, and with no internal HDDk? I have never booted from a memory stick before.
BTW would a desktop fan, pointed into the open computer, help to stop these HDDs failing? It was the platens that went last year.
I am very open to suggestions as I don;t know whether I am going about this in the right way.
With thanks in advance.
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