Windows 7 vs Windows 10

lostsoul62

Member
What I did is buy two 120 GB SSD Drive and put Windows 7 on one and Windows 10 on the other and they are on the same computer so now I can use which one I want.
 
No that would have been a dual boot and that causes problems. With 2 SSD 120 GB hard drive at $40 each it's safe and only take 1 minute to change.
 
What problems? The only thing I can remotely think of is the corruption of the Boot Manager and I've never had problems with that.
 
I've had about a dozen dual boots back in the olden days and yes I had the Boot Manager corruption. Everyone is different. There are some people that put data on the C Drive and in the 30 years I've had computers I have never done that. Some people don't have backups and I have a dozen of them. What works for one person another person won't like it. Doing what I'm doing feels good to me and just wanted to share.
 
No that would have been a dual boot and that causes problems. With 2 SSD 120 GB hard drive at $40 each it's safe and only take 1 minute to change.
But that requires going into the bios or pressing a key for boot menu. If you had a dual boot, then you would get a menu on startup on which OS you wanted to boot to. And hopefully you aren't using the same license key for both installs because windows 7 will become not genuine.
 
I've had about a dozen dual boots back in the olden days and yes I had the Boot Manager corruption. Everyone is different. There are some people that put data on the C Drive and in the 30 years I've had computers I have never done that. Some people don't have backups and I have a dozen of them. What works for one person another person won't like it. Doing what I'm doing feels good to me and just wanted to share.
My initial question is out of curiosity. Don't need to get defensive about it. Buying 2 separate drives for the sake of having an OS on each drive is rather rare, and I've only seen people do it with a Windows and Linux marriage. But not Windows and Windows setup.

As for data backup, there's a lot of ways of doing it. How do you do yours? Again... just out of curiosity and perhaps can provide ideas to improve data security.
 
There are some people that put data on the C Drive and in the 30 years I've had computers I have never done that.
You could argue that the OS is data.

BAM!
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Not with the new BOIS.
If you have Windows 7 and upgrade to Windows 10 from your Windows 7 you can have either one on the Internet but not both at the same time.
I agree that having 2 separate drive is rare for 2 OS's. There really isn't any wrong or right way but again it just makes me feel secure.
Of course Date is just put on a bunch of drives but the OS is Imaged and put on a bunch of drives.
Data security is easy. Put your data on no less than 2 separate drives. You can put your data on the cloud if you know what your doing and put one copy off site like give a hard drive with your data to a relative for safe keeping.
 
I've got a setup similar for data backup. I have a NAS in raid 1 and I use my old NAS box to rsync the new one, but only for specific folders that are deemed necessary and a maximum quota per user split evenly.


But please expand on the "Not with the new BIOS". I'm assuming you're talking about choosing which OS to boot from @johnb35's post.
 
Personally, I never liked dual boot and haven't setup a dual boot machine in quite a few years. I prefer VMs or even a separate physical machine. I've considered installing hot swap drive bays to be able to easily switch between OSs but I generally need/want to be running multiple OSs at the same time which I can't do with separate drives or dual booting.
 
yeah,for the most part,i cant see any reason to dual boot.

You do if you run 7 and are comfortable with it, but yet like to get 10 and try it out, since it is free (for the time being) I build a harness where I can connect with a power switch either one of two HDs,(5v and 12V) each containing the different OS. Now I can run either OS by selecting the desired one before I power up. A dual system without the hazards of a dual OS system.
 
i hated win8 but transitioned to 10 very smoothly.you can upgrade to 10 and you still have 30 days to revert back to 7.
 
What I did is buy two 120 GB SSD Drive and put Windows 7 on one and Windows 10 on the other and they are on the same computer so now I can use which one I want.

Yeah, you could pretty much always do that.

Not with the new BOIS.
If you have Windows 7 and upgrade to Windows 10 from your Windows 7 you can have either one on the Internet but not both at the same time.

Of course Date is just put on a bunch of drives but the OS is Imaged and put on a bunch of drives.

I've read both of these sentences a few times. They both seem kinda confusing as in bewildering or perplexing

UEFI (Unified Extensible Firmware Interface) It replaces the old BIOS

I think we most know what UEFI is. What's your point about it?
 
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