Kryptkeeper :
I'm not too savvy with transfering stuff to new drives when an os is involved. I would install win to the ssd. copy whatever i needed to save from the hdd to the ssd (images, videos, music, documents). wipe the hdd and reinstall all my software changing the destination to the hdd. then transfer files back from ssd to hdd.
Tips as a newbie to ssd. 1) NEVER full format the ssd, if you need to wipe it for whatever reason choose "quick format".
2) Learn how to create junctions, some programs especially web browsers will tend to set their temp folder location to that of the os and they don't let you change it. Putting in a junction to connect the folder to the hdd will save you alot of unneeded writes to your ssd and increase its life expectancy.
#2 - that junction crap is COMPLETELY not necessary.
Firstly, the concept of too many writes killing the SSD lifespan is long outdated.
Current SSD's are warranted to last to 75 or 150TBW (or more in some cases).
Actual endurance testing of current consumer grade SSD's has shown them to last beyond 600TB, in some cases beyond 1PB.
My personal use? 3+ years, running 24/7 as the boot drive. Reasonably heavy use as a normal kind of person.
120GB Kingston - in 3+ years,
~12TBW.
I'll leave it to you to extrapolate that out.
The only adjustments made were turning off hibernation, reducing the pagefile to 1GB min/max, and redirecting Downloads, Docs, Music, etc to other drives, via the built in functionality.
There is zero need to force, via junction points, everything to be elsewhere.
Outdated concept for an outdated problem.