![]() |
|
Welcome to Vista Banter. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to ask questions and reply to others posts, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Windows Vista File Management Issues or questions in relation to Vista's file management. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.file_management) |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
In the event that I want to format my OS, reinstall it or upgrade it, i will
have to backup my documents folder and all the nonsense inside it. To fix that problem, ive just created a partition on my hard drive called "Documents" and another called "Pictures". That way files i actually want to keep, are not located and taking up space on the operating system drive. My question is: Is there a way to tell windows that this is the new location of "My Documents" and "My Pictures" essentially just remapping their location so that programs that use "My Documents" (for example games often store save games inside your My Documents folder) will begin storing their files in the new partitions i've created? |
|
|||
|
Answered my own question!
I click start, right click on either "Documents" or "Pictures" then click on properties. I then click on the Location tab and hit the "move" button and select the new drive. "Jonas" wrote: In the event that I want to format my OS, reinstall it or upgrade it, i will have to backup my documents folder and all the nonsense inside it. To fix that problem, ive just created a partition on my hard drive called "Documents" and another called "Pictures". That way files i actually want to keep, are not located and taking up space on the operating system drive. My question is: Is there a way to tell windows that this is the new location of "My Documents" and "My Pictures" essentially just remapping their location so that programs that use "My Documents" (for example games often store save games inside your My Documents folder) will begin storing their files in the new partitions i've created? |
|
|||
|
Actually its partially answered. There is still the hidden folder called
"Application Data" hidden in my old C:\user\jonaS\appdata folder taking up space :P any way to tell windows to store this somewehre else? "Jonas" wrote: Answered my own question! I click start, right click on either "Documents" or "Pictures" then click on properties. I then click on the Location tab and hit the "move" button and select the new drive. "Jonas" wrote: In the event that I want to format my OS, reinstall it or upgrade it, i will have to backup my documents folder and all the nonsense inside it. To fix that problem, ive just created a partition on my hard drive called "Documents" and another called "Pictures". That way files i actually want to keep, are not located and taking up space on the operating system drive. My question is: Is there a way to tell windows that this is the new location of "My Documents" and "My Pictures" essentially just remapping their location so that programs that use "My Documents" (for example games often store save games inside your My Documents folder) will begin storing their files in the new partitions i've created? |
|
|||
|
There's no need to do that with Vista anymore, because when you reinstall
Vista it automatically moves all of your user data out of harms way into a folder called "Windows Old". Then it lays down the OS, without any leftovers from the previous version. That being said, there is NO substitute for a regular backup program. Whether you use Windows backup or another one is your call, but get one that will do a scheduled backup. I have one that runs every night and then once a week it backs up the whole weeks worth of nightly backups to a removable drive. Then the cycle starts again. -- Ray Rogers "Jonas" wrote in message ... Actually its partially answered. There is still the hidden folder called "Application Data" hidden in my old C:\user\jonaS\appdata folder taking up space :P any way to tell windows to store this somewehre else? "Jonas" wrote: Answered my own question! I click start, right click on either "Documents" or "Pictures" then click on properties. I then click on the Location tab and hit the "move" button and select the new drive. "Jonas" wrote: In the event that I want to format my OS, reinstall it or upgrade it, i will have to backup my documents folder and all the nonsense inside it. To fix that problem, ive just created a partition on my hard drive called "Documents" and another called "Pictures". That way files i actually want to keep, are not located and taking up space on the operating system drive. My question is: Is there a way to tell windows that this is the new location of "My Documents" and "My Pictures" essentially just remapping their location so that programs that use "My Documents" (for example games often store save games inside your My Documents folder) will begin storing their files in the new partitions i've created? |