Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work. - Thomas Edison
Quote from: Squeegie on September 30, 2016, 11:07:16 AMGlad you got it figured out Dan....BUT, a 136 GB C: partition is pretty small. Especially when you have all that available space elsewhere.Not sure what the specs are of your drivesare, but a nice 250 GB or 500 GB SSD as your boot/C: drive would make your system come to life.A few years back, SSD's were not as affordable as today, and 128 drives for the C were pretty common. That's my predicament.
Glad you got it figured out Dan....BUT, a 136 GB C: partition is pretty small. Especially when you have all that available space elsewhere.Not sure what the specs are of your drivesare, but a nice 250 GB or 500 GB SSD as your boot/C: drive would make your system come to life.
Quote from: Frog on September 30, 2016, 11:24:04 AMQuote from: Squeegie on September 30, 2016, 11:07:16 AMGlad you got it figured out Dan....BUT, a 136 GB C: partition is pretty small. Especially when you have all that available space elsewhere.Not sure what the specs are of your drivesare, but a nice 250 GB or 500 GB SSD as your boot/C: drive would make your system come to life.A few years back, SSD's were not as affordable as today, and 128 drives for the C were pretty common. That's my predicament.by a Crucial drive, it comes with a utility that will transfer everything to your new drive. You can be up and running with a bigger drive with very little headache. I think it took two reboots and a software install.pierre
Quote from: blue moon on September 30, 2016, 04:42:36 PMQuote from: Frog on September 30, 2016, 11:24:04 AMQuote from: Squeegie on September 30, 2016, 11:07:16 AMGlad you got it figured out Dan....BUT, a 136 GB C: partition is pretty small. Especially when you have all that available space elsewhere.Not sure what the specs are of your drivesare, but a nice 250 GB or 500 GB SSD as your boot/C: drive would make your system come to life.A few years back, SSD's were not as affordable as today, and 128 drives for the C were pretty common. That's my predicament.by a Crucial drive, it comes with a utility that will transfer everything to your new drive. You can be up and running with a bigger drive with very little headache. I think it took two reboots and a software install.pierreIntel and Samsung drives also come with cloning tools, super easy.
Quote from: GraphicDisorder on September 30, 2016, 05:17:54 PMQuote from: blue moon on September 30, 2016, 04:42:36 PMQuote from: Frog on September 30, 2016, 11:24:04 AMQuote from: Squeegie on September 30, 2016, 11:07:16 AMGlad you got it figured out Dan....BUT, a 136 GB C: partition is pretty small. Especially when you have all that available space elsewhere.Not sure what the specs are of your drivesare, but a nice 250 GB or 500 GB SSD as your boot/C: drive would make your system come to life.A few years back, SSD's were not as affordable as today, and 128 drives for the C were pretty common. That's my predicament.by a Crucial drive, it comes with a utility that will transfer everything to your new drive. You can be up and running with a bigger drive with very little headache. I think it took two reboots and a software install.pierreIntel and Samsung drives also come with cloning tools, super easy.Won't they all also require some sort of usb/SATA adapter or Drive Dock or something?
One can easily say, "get a bigger HD" but I still go back to (I'm not adding any programs or anything on here) for this to increase.
Same issue again. I've removed some large files from the Application Data/Local/Temp/Files folder, but still too full.I have these 16gb page files but not sure if I can just remove them. I tried relocating it to another drive and it's assigned to the other drive but still shows up on the C drive as the 16 gb.Can they just be deleted/cleared out and it rebuilds up again?