I’ve replaced my old laptop with a new one and I have over 350GB worth of data to move over, moving all of it to an external drive and then moving them to the new laptop doesn’t seem efficient and it seems like it’s gonna take forever

I know there are some special cables that can do that but I don’t wanna waste money on something that I’m only gonna use once every 5 years at most.

  • BananaTrifleViolin@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Lots of people are suggesting network cables and the likes.

    But if the data is so valuable you want to migrate it then isn’t it also worth backing it up? I’d buy an external HD, copy the data onto that and then copy it to your new laptop and keep the hard drive somewhere safe as a backup.

    • Xero@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      my home network is quite slow and the ethernet port on my old laptop is damaged, it only works sometimes so it’ll definitely disconnect during the process.

      • tentphone@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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        1 year ago

        You could try getting an external hard drive/SSD enclosure, putting the hard drive/ssd from your old laptop in it, and plugging it into your new computer to copy the files over. Twice as fast as copying to an external drive and then copying that to the new PC.

      • Slapplebags@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Buy a cheap USB to Ethernet adapter then and directly connect the two computers via Ethernet. USB to USB is possible but it’s not worth the time and effort, network will be faster and easier. Or why not just buy a cheap external hard drive? According to Amazon a 500gb external hard drive can be had for $30 USD.

      • FiveMacs@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        Then use/get a usb data stick and transfer em that way or subsequently if it’s the laptop you want to transfer off of, remove the HDD or SSD and get an adapter to plug the drive into usb.

        Look for sata to usb adapters

        • Fester@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          USB drives are ridiculous these days. 512g for ~$40 USD. And USB 3 can fill it up in like a minute. Plus it’s always handy to have one. Best value option IMO.

      • iAmTheTot@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        By home network, do you mean your internet speed? Because if you do, FYI, your computers and electronics can almost certainly talk to each other over your local network much faster than that.

      • joey@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Do you have a router? I mean something resembling a LAN? If so the outbound network speeds wouldn’t matter.

        • Xero@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          I do have a router, but I have to use wifi for the old laptop, does it affect the transfer speed?

          • terny@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            If you already have a router no need to buy other cables/hardware. It’s a piece of tech specifically design for networking. Just share the drive on the network and go at it. I think average wifi speed is like 1Gbps.

  • jpgb@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    When you say it’s going to ‘take forever’ how long are we talking? Can you try a small batch and see how long it takes? If you really are only doing this every 5 years or so and don’t want to spend any money then the setup you have may be your best option.

    If you want to spend $10 or so you could buy a cat6 Ethernet cable (and you may also need to buy a dongle for the laptop). The transfer would take a few hours.

    Depending on your internet speed you could also sign up for a single month of Dropbox and do it that way (again, about $10).

    For the quickest (and most expensive way) you could purchase an external nvme/SSD which would do the job in a few minutes. Couple hundred dollars but then you’ve got a very useful device that you can use in future.

  • vatw@vlemmy.net
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    1 year ago

    I’m pretty sure you need something called a “usb transfer cable” which can do the job. It has a special electronic chip in the middle that tricks each PC on either side into thinking the other is a usb stick. (Or something!??)

    I’ve never used one, and didn’t know there was such a thing which existed until minutes ago. But like you say - probably a waste to use once.

    If one happens to be an Apple brand, they do have something called Target Disk Mode, but assuming not since you say PC.

  • bbbbbbbbbbb@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Use an ethernet cord, if youre asking this question then you likely have one lying around. I did it a few months ago, had to jump some hoops like disconnecting from all networks and making folders discoverable to get it working though

    • Duckman@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      If you’re going to directly connect them using just a single cable then it needs to be a crossover cable and he’ll need to set the IP manually on each end. Most people don’t have a crossover cable lying around. It would be easier to plug both computers into a router/switch and do a network transfer or just get a USB adapter for whatever kind of drive is in the old computer.

      Edit: it’s been a while since I needed to dot do that and apparently modern Ethernet doesn’t need specialized cables anymore. TIL.

    • k3yword@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      1 year ago

      This would probably be the fastest way, OP. I know a lot of laptops don’t have a port for it, but if yours do, then do that.

  • Kissaki@feddit.de
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    1 year ago

    If speed is your concern, you may also want to try network cable or wifi. You can share, access, and copy files over the network.

    For USB, if you can use a USB 3 Port specifically it’ll be faster than USB 2 ports.

    I’m not familiar with direct us pc connections. When you connect the two via USB, the OS may ask you what kind of connection it is. One will have to serve as the host or controller, and the other as a device like a storage device.

  • Bucket_of_Truth@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    If you’re on the same network I would just use Filezilla ftp client. Download it on both devices and you can transfer whatever between them.

    Are you planning on keeping the old laptop? If it’s not a proprietary drive type you could probably just take it out and pop it into your new computer. Most newer laptops can support two
    SSD. If they’re both M.2 drives you wouldn’t even need a new cable, just a screwdriver.

  • tal@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I think that the problem you run into is that USB isn’t a network of peers. There’s a host, and devices that it talks to. The USB controller circuitry needs to support acting in both device and host mode, and unless something has changed, I don’t think that laptop USB controllers can normally do that.

    There are devices with USB controllers that can, like Android devices, which is why you can both plug your phone into a computer as well as attach USB devices to the phone.

    I assume that both can handle wireless Ethernet, even if they don’t have wired Ethernet connections. IIRC, there’s an ad-hoc networking mode where one can basically act as a base station for the other. You might look into that. I don’t know what OS you’re using or what support for that is like.

    EDIT: I do Linux, but this discusses setup for Windows machines.

    https://www.lifewire.com/how-to-set-up-an-ad-hoc-wireless-network-2377459

    Once you have them talking to each other via wireless Ethernet, if it’s Windows, there’s a file-sharing feature. If I were doing this between two Linux machines, I’d probably use rsync over ssh.

    If you have a base station/wireless access point/broadband router/whatever you want to call it, and you can have both laptops join its network and it can be configured to let both machines see each other, that might cut the ad-hoc network out. I don’t know whether the typical WAP is configured to let devices on the wireless network talk to each other these days, though I suppose that if people have things like printers on their wireless network that have to talk to their computers, they must be.

  • Cevilia (she/they/…)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 year ago

    Unfortunately you would need some kind of electronics in the middle. You can get USB “bridged” or “networking” cables, but they aren’t regular USB cables.

    However, the electronics could be a smartphone if you have one. Transfer the files from your old laptop to the phone, then to your new laptop.

    Ultimately, networking would be the easiest and fastest way to do it. If you’re on Windows, you could use a program such as FastCopy to verify the files on the receiving end.

  • claymore@pawb.social
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    1 year ago

    Without buying any cables, go to toffeeshare.com, select what you need and check the “Share with nearby devices” box to transfer everything over the local network. Just put both PCs on the same wifi network.

    • apemint@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      What is this magic? And why the hell isn’t direct file sharing built into every device?!

  • BarqsHasBite@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    If this is data you care about, you should have a second copy on an external drive anyway. Laptops are not great for keeping data. They get lost, stolen, damaged, etc. So I say buy an external drive, put it on that, and transfer that way too.

    If you’re scraping the old laptop, pull the drive out and put it in an enclosure. Now you have an almost free external drive.

  • NoConfidence_2192@rblind.com
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    1 year ago

    You probably can

    Do they both have Thunderbolt ports? Windows, Mac, or Linux? Wired or wireless networking?

    If they both have thunderbolt 3/4 and you have a cable you can connect both to the cable and use Thunderbolt networking. MSI has a pretty good how to

    Otherwise:

    • Transfer over network (buy usb ethernet adapter if necessary $10-15 on amazon)
    • Buy USB transfer cable and use it to transfer
    • Remove HD from old laptop, buy compatible external HD enclosure, put it in external HD enclosure and connect it to new laptop
    • Copy files from old laptop to existing external drive, then connect external drive to new laptop
  • neal@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    You could turn it into an external hd or install it in new laptop (assuming you have an extra bay).