![]() The Microsoft knowledgebase have some decent articles. I would strongly advise you do a little research of UEFI MBR GPT partitions. They can be the same partition (and usually are esp in some older operating systems)- but do not have to be- and you need a reasonable level of competence to figure what you're doing. Honestly- if you are not happy to play around with partitions, system files- and if you screw up- system prompt instructions for modifying structures (or using a Linux distro installation disk to boot- so you can modify the partition information back again)- just don't do it.Īlso- your 'c:' drive- or the drive on which you have your windows folder- contrary to what a lot of people will tell you- does not have to be active- your partition on which your MBR is- does. UEFI and other considerations have to be taken into account- thus- if you look at Windows 10 on a modern computer- it'll have a small (usually 100Mb) hidden partition marked as active- whereas the main 'c:' drive- contrary to what you expect- is not the active partition- and if you modify it to active status- when you reboot you'll get an error message 'Unable to load MBR'. Here is the GPT disk you connected to your computer before. Then, you need to select an unallocated space on the destination disk. Click Migrate OS to SSD in the left pane and click Next. ![]() Unless you are familiar with what you're doing- you would be well advised not to play around with the active status of various disk partitions.Į.g. Install and run AOMEI Partition Assistant Professional. ![]()
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