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Solve : Changing Program Files folder to other drive? |
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Answer» I recently built my computer (today, actually) with a SSD for the main boot drive and a 2TB HDD for my storage. I've managed to change the profiles' folder to the storage drive, but I've been reading that you can't move the Program Files and Program Files (x86) folders without causing issues with Windows Update, .NET framework and Visual Studio, and other miscellaneous issues. However, I read that if you put some kind of link (symbolic, hard, not 100% sure) in the place of the original folder and pointed it to the HDD it would work. I've never used links before, other than the standard shortcuts, so can anyone help me out?With Win7 and later (possibly vista) you can use the mklink command to create hard links, symbolic links, and directory junctions. You'll almost certainly run into issues though (especially if an issue with a drive makes files inaccessible in some way); it's almost safer to just INSTALL programs to the second drive manually.I'd test this out on a small scale first with one program that will need updates after install, such as a game maybe that requires PATCHES to play online etc. *However I know for a fact that a game like World of Warcraft will work no matter where its moved to and update from any location since the updater is coded as such to update from its execution location and not an explicit path to only C:\Program Files\World of Warcraft\ as is the default install location, other programs I dont believe are this flexible in how updates are performed. One game that I definately know is explicitly pathed in both execution and updates is AION. I chose to install this game to an alternate path to my SSD since I like to run games through my SSD for fast load times of 15GB to 30GB etc, and AION if told during installation to install to an alternate path will install to 3 locations ( Registry Keys with explicit pointers to C:\Program Files\NCSoft\AION\ , C:\Program Files\NCSoft\AION\ for a portion of the game contents, as well as my X: drive which is my SSD at X:\AION which has about another 50% of the game installed to it. ) *This game clearly was never designed to be installed to anything other than the default location of C:\Program Files\NCSoft\AION\ given that installing to an alternate path splits it in half like this. it's almost safer to just install programs to the second drive manually.I agree with Technogeeks statement, I also dont believe you will be able to relocate the entirety of Program Files to an alternate drive without some complications arrising from this.So instead of having Win7 installed on the SSD and having most of my storage on the HDD, I should install it on the HDD then put games and such onto the SSD? Hmm, that should work. But you're right about the boot speed, I thought it would be faster than that. |
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