And I don't believe it's possible without reinstalling Win 11 because it contains thousands of references to where executable files and all the associated other data for programs/apps are.
Sure you can. Clone the disk. Then uninstall all the apps that you want to put on the other drive. Then reinstall those apps. The Windows install itself will remain mostly unaffected.
I will look into that, but I believe that I have to reboot every time I want to work on the digital photographs. I have a very large number of exposures and that route, if it works could be awkward.
I already upgraded the graphics card to run the most recent os that can (without using that patcher) run on it. It's still doing what I want it to do, Firefox updates, so I don't need it getting any more recent.
Mine only has a single CPU, although it's the best one I could put in it. I paid ~400 for this machine 6 or 7 years ago - it was definitely worth that. People are still trying to sell them for that price. You can get a trash can for a bit more - but you can't stuff that full of hard drives...
I expect that the issue is that @Agulliver doubts that there will be enough room on the target SSD he wants to purchase/use for everything on the originating HDD.
Cloning my C: drive would be easy but I don't want to do that as I can't justify the expense of a 2TB SSD.
What I am thinking about is keeping the HDD for my audio, video, photos & documents and putting the OS onto a separate SSD (the laptop can have both). And I don't believe it's possible without reinstalling Win 11 because it contains thousands of references to where executable files and all the associated other data for programs/apps are.
Why would you need to do that?
Once you have installed a current OS, you can use it as your main OS for everything including editing provided that your software will run on the OS you're using.
and hasn't been congested with garbage.
I'll need to install all the programs too and that really is a pain. Though, it's no more a pain than buying a new laptop and doing the same.
Win 10 was better in that regard.
This also does updates in the background, and not just when it tells/ask you it will. IDK if the update engine actually changed all that much since Win7.
It seems to me that Win 11 update uses *vastly* more CPU, RAM and HDD resources than win 10 and 7 updates did.
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