- Local time
- 5:53 AM
- Posts
- 25
- OS
- Windows 11
My Computer
System One
-
- OS
- Windows 11
- Computer type
- PC/Desktop
- Manufacturer/Model
- ASUS
- CPU
- Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-8400 CPU @ 2.80GHz, 2808
- Memory
- 16GB RAM
- Graphics Card(s)
- RTX 2060
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Atm I'm more interested in alternative solutions minus buying new SSD. My current goal is to balance out my SSD spaces because my secondary has ridiculous amount of free space while Windows one almost none.It does not matter which partition tool you use, your goal cannot be completed.
I'm guessing this is exactly the same operation but fewer clicks?
View attachment 88973View attachment 88974
My User Home alone is 39.52GB
= much worth doing this EaseUS operation with the Program Files only and leave "User Home" files alone?I wouldn't move Windows parts.
Move 3rd party programs instead.
= much worth doing this EaseUS operation with the Program Files only and leave "User Home" files alone?
I use FolderSize frequently and I couldn't find any significantly size-heavy installed programs.
If it's not your user folders using up all this space (that I can get my brain around) just how many applications have you got installed and do you use all of them.My main goal is to free up lots of space on C: to the cost of the secondary drive to speed up my Windows experience.
I only need to know what type of operations it does under the hood to achieve what it claims to do. What it's saying on the surface level on these screenshots can be interpreted in many ways (eg. I thought at first moves all of it to S: then uses symlinks to point back to their original locations, which I DON'T want).It comes down to this:
How risk-averse are you, considering you apparently have little or no experience with EaseUS?
Answer appears to be "not very".
Only you would know.
I think this is the first time I have ever disagreed with you Ghot. If he doesn't move the folders, all his default 'save file' associations in his apps will be pointing to the wrong partition.Don't move the folders themselves
What it's saying on the surface level on these screenshots can be interpreted in many ways (eg. I thought at first moves all of it to S: then uses symlinks to point back to their original locations, which I DON'T want).
I think this is the first time I have ever disagreed with you Ghot. If he doesn't move the folders, all his default 'save file' associations in his apps will be pointing to the wrong partition.
He would have to make a lot of other changes to straighten that out.
By moving the default folder locations, every other association in windows will follow that path.