In the past, with mobos with legacy bios, it was possible to set all of the device drivers on an existing installation to "standard" and then swap the win xp drive to the new mobo. Assuming that with the new mobo that I can turn off the safe boot mode and set the mobo to boot with legacy bios, is this possible with newer motherboards? Or will the standard xp drivers simply not work with the newer hardware?
As for linux, I would assume that my version of linux (Debian Wheezy 7.8) should have the necessary drivers. Again, I would want to have the mobo boot in legacy bios mode so I don't have to dink around with adding a GPT partition and changing the boot loader, etc. etc. etc.
Yeah, I know: update to win 7 or 8. I will go without a computer first. I only use Windows for ONE program. Not going to update the system for that.
Any HELPFUL response would be most welcome. Suggested mobos would be a real plus.
As for linux, I would assume that my version of linux (Debian Wheezy 7.8) should have the necessary drivers. Again, I would want to have the mobo boot in legacy bios mode so I don't have to dink around with adding a GPT partition and changing the boot loader, etc. etc. etc.
Yeah, I know: update to win 7 or 8. I will go without a computer first. I only use Windows for ONE program. Not going to update the system for that.
Any HELPFUL response would be most welcome. Suggested mobos would be a real plus.