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There are some drives, formatted as NTFS or FAT32 etc. that Windows will recognize instantaneously. You may still have to assign a drive letter or something (which is akin to "mounting" a disk under UNIX, for example), but other than that you'll be good to go. If, however, the disc has previously been formatted for, I dunno, a flavor of LINUX, UNIX, VMS or Apple, that Windows doesn't recognize, or if the disk has been used in a proprietary RAID array, for example, you may need to jump through a couple more hoops first. Also, it depends on whether you want to salvage the data on the disk or just wipe it and use it afresh.
One other point, if an old disk has an operating system on it, you can either keep it and play with choosing the OS you want on boot (a lot of people who dabble in LINUX but need to keep using Windows do this, for example), or it may interfere and give you Windows 7 when all you ever want is Windows 10.
And why anyone would want to keep using Windows 7 is anyone's guess.... (said yours truly who still handwrites with a fountain pen....) |
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