Hi, I'd like to understand a little bit of logic behind this.
My laptop that had Win 7 x64 installed died. So I took the drive out of it, put it in a case and connected it to my Desktop that also runs Win 7 x64.
The drive shows up exactly as it would of the laptop, and if I directly run any of the installed programs then most of them actually run directly of it.
How does that work? I always thought that there are compatibility issues?
It doesn't work in every case. For example, for Revo Unsinstaller it said "Automation Object Not Found"!.
Anyway, I thought it was pretty interesting, because the programs did not install themselves on the desktop or anything, so basically does the OS think this drive is a part of the existing computer? And is this the normal way applications would behave where there are no compatibility issues?
My laptop that had Win 7 x64 installed died. So I took the drive out of it, put it in a case and connected it to my Desktop that also runs Win 7 x64.
The drive shows up exactly as it would of the laptop, and if I directly run any of the installed programs then most of them actually run directly of it.
How does that work? I always thought that there are compatibility issues?
It doesn't work in every case. For example, for Revo Unsinstaller it said "Automation Object Not Found"!.
Anyway, I thought it was pretty interesting, because the programs did not install themselves on the desktop or anything, so basically does the OS think this drive is a part of the existing computer? And is this the normal way applications would behave where there are no compatibility issues?