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February 23rd, 2007

Vista Hands On #7: Move user data to another drive

Posted by Ed Bott @ 7:36 am

Categories: Tips, Windows Vista

Tags:

In Focus » See more posts on: Vista Tips, Hands on Vista, Vista

Windows Vista introduces a fundamental change in the way user data is stored. The XP-style Documents And Settings folder is gone, replaced by the Users folder, which is located in the root of the system drive. Each user account has its own profile folder here, which contains 11 folders, each devoted to a different type of data.

One of the smartest things you can do with these folders is to relocate them to a different drive than the one that contains Windows and your Program Files folder. The advantage? By separating system files from data, you make it easy to back up and restore each. Create an image-based backup of the system drive (using the built-in Complete PC Backup tool in Vista Business or Ultimate editions or a third-party product like Acronis True Image) and back up data files using whatever method works best for you. If something happens to your system drive, you can restore the image, and your data files remain unaffected.

Although you can partition a single drive into multiple volumes, I recommend using two separate physical drives for maximum data security; in a two-drive configuration a hardware failure doesn’t wipe out everything.

Moving your user data folders is ridiculously easy. The instructions below assume you have added a second drive using the letter E:.

  1. Click Start, Computer, and double-click the icon for your data drive (E:, in this example).
  2. On the Windows Explorer toolbar, click Organize and choose New Folder from the menu.
  3. Type a name for the folder in which you want to store all your document folders. For convenience, I use my user name, but you can choose any legal folder name. Double-click this folder to open it in the current window.
  4. Click Start and then click your user name (at the top of the right column on the Start menu). This opens a second Explorer window containing your data folders.
  5. Press Ctrl+A to select all folders. Point to any selected folder, hold down the right mouse button, and drag to the folder you created in Step 3.
  6. Release the mouse button. Windows displays a shortcut menu asking whether you want to move or copy the selected items. Choose Move Here.

That’s it. You can verify that the data folders have been moved by returning to the user profile folder, opening the Properties dialog box for any subfolder, and looking at the Location tab.

If you want to leave some user data on the system drive and only move specific folders (Music or Videos, let’s say), you can do so by modifying the procedure in Step 5. Instead of selecting all folders, right-click and drag one folder at a time into the new location.

Ed BottEd Bott is an award-winning technology writer with more than two decades' experience writing for mainstream media outlets and online publications. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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Related Discussions on TechRepublic

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  • Most Recent of 77 Talkback(s)
Smart backup
Any moderately intelligent backup software would of course find the location of your user files simply by asking the operating system. And that applies even when the data would be located on a differe... (Read the rest)
Posted by: JanaPe Posted on: 12/16/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Finally!!!  Michael Kelly | 02/23/07
XP Data  misceng | 02/26/07
Steps for XP  reverseswing | 02/28/07
move data folder  andywright | 03/31/07
You can still use that technique  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 06/14/08
Such Good Stuff!!  rush@... | 02/23/07
but why only 11 types of data  mmgood | 02/23/07
No more "My"  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/23/07
Running behind again  klumper | 02/23/07
Just like we've being doing it with Linux for years ...  George Mitchell | 02/23/07
It's been available in Windows for years too.  ye | 02/24/07
available  dwest_z | 02/26/07
#8 Install NEW OS over Vista  michael_t | 02/23/07
Good grief.  mosborne | 02/23/07
Thanks grandpa  klumper | 02/23/07
Grandpa? LOL  mosborne | 02/23/07
Thanks grandpa x2  klumper | 02/24/07
Oh Good Grief! This Is An OS Improvement?  DaffyDuck | 02/23/07
Where did I say that?  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/23/07
It's all about contradictions, Ed  John Zern | 02/24/07
Simpler  JJ Brannon | 02/26/07
Doesn't work with public documents folder  ocbizlaw | 11/02/07
A small change  deaf_e_kate | 02/23/07
"Fundamental" does not mean "new" or "innovative"  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/23/07
i know what you meant  deaf_e_kate | 02/24/07
I used the word exactly as it's defined in the English language  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/24/07
Ed's right  klumper | 02/24/07
Wrong Again!  Ole Man | 02/26/07
Now why d'ya go and do that?  klumper | 02/27/07
i guess you haven't read  deaf_e_kate | 02/25/07
I can find people who believe in Bigfoot too  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/25/07
Ed didn't imply that  gitmo | 02/26/07
My inner copy editor and grammarian  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 03/01/07
what about the entire user folder?  impala_sc | 02/23/07
Not supported  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/23/07
then don't you risk data?  impala_sc | 02/23/07
Wrong  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/23/07
That's why you image the system drive  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/24/07
not just email in appdata  impala_sc | 02/25/07
Here's why I keep appdata on the system volume  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/25/07
So then how is it done?  Oyev | 06/30/07
That Doesn't Make Sense  s31064 | 11/30/09
Smart backup  JanaPe | 12/16/09
Reason to move User folder to D  benjamin_nelson@... | 08/23/07
What about the Joneseseses  jem26@... | 02/26/07
Settings files? Not clear from your article  8string | 02/26/07
yes i agree.  cnieves@... | 03/12/07
Vista #7??  puppadave | 02/26/07
Two issues  Robert Crocker | 02/28/07
How a restore affects existing Data in Vista  garyd01@... | 02/28/07
Already did that post  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 03/01/07
Problem with #7  abnranger76 | 03/03/07
Problem with Favorites  gregc1978 | 03/07/07
Adding New Favorites in IE7  escapepod | 03/22/07
moving users  cnieves@... | 03/12/07
yeah right  cnieves@... | 03/12/07
Instead of a migrate use junctions  mrlinux | 03/13/07
What about other folders?  ardash_muradian@... | 03/16/07
Reported Disc Space Usage Issue  escapepod | 03/17/07
#7 Doesn't work  Berlzy | 03/21/07
Howto move user profile folders in Vista  joshmouch | 04/07/07
Relocating & moving entire vista user folder  mrgcav | 07/17/07
doesn't do the job  jeh1 | 08/06/07
It no work maaan  steve.williams@... | 11/16/07
I've tested this dozens of times  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 06/14/08
RE: Vista Hands On #7: Move user data to another drive  ravenous@... | 04/13/08
IMPORTANT: "My Documents" hidden junction needs to be updated too  dupublic | 05/10/08
not work  huawei | 06/07/08
RE: Vista Hands On #7: Move user data to another drive  vincenzo99 | 09/22/08
RE: Vista Hands On  geekygirl | 09/24/08
RE: Vista Hands On #7: Move user data to another drive  captgoodhope | 02/09/09
I think it works the same  Ed BottZDNet Moderator | 02/09/09
I think it works the same *NEW*  captgoodhope | 02/09/09
RE: Vista Hands On #7: Move user data to another drive  Oscar de Lama | 05/23/09
RE: Vista Hands On #7: Move user data to another drive  dan.gale@... | 09/23/09
RE: Vista Hands On #7: Move user data to another drive  peterevanz | 10/29/09
RE: Vista Hands On #7: Move user data to another drive  jalbertini | 12/02/09

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