I'm getting a new computer soon and was wondering how do I transfer all of my Photoshop photos and Photoshop itself over to my new computer.Will I have to reinstall my Epson 3800 printer into the new computer as well??I hope this isn't a big ordeal.
I'm getting a new computer soon and was wondering how do I transfer all of my Photoshop photos and Photoshop itself over to my new computer.Will I have to reinstall my Epson 3800 printer into the new computer as well??I hope this isn't a big ordeal.
It can be a big ordeal if you don't know how to do it. Do you live in an area supported by Geek Squad. Help from someone like that might be a good investment.
Well my stepson are good with computers so I was going to rely on them,possibly.
The photos can be copied and transferred just like any file. I'm not sure but would bet that photoshop will need to be loaded from the original media. You should be able to download the printer drivers from the Internet
Brian is correct. You'll have to copy and transfer your files to the new computer either with a USB thumb drive, or over a network. You'll need to reinstall your applications, including Photo Shop. You can easily download a driver for your 3880, and, if you use Epson profiles, you can download and install a fresh set.
If you're not comfortable doing these things, get help.
Oh, one other thing: If this is a new computer from Dell, HP, or...it will come with lots of trial (i.e. junk) software. Before you copy new files, or install any thing, uninstall this stuff. A lot of it runs at start up, and runs in the background, slowing down your computer. You'll be happier if it's gone.
--P
Preston-Columbia CA
"If you want nice fresh oats, you have to pay a fair price. If you can be satisfied with oats that have already been through the horse; that comes a little cheaper."
you may have a newer version of photoshop - i have 2 photoshop elements 9 and 11 download installs ( only 9 active ) and CS6 from a kosher Adobe disc - all registered...You may be lucky enough to just install the version from disc - or get it again from Adobe via your profile there. It can be a little tricky as they only allow xx amount of installs or something - i think you de activate. Good luck - it may pay in future to back up all image files on a couple of portable hard drives - 2 because of failure..i have Hasselblad .FFF scanner files around 326 Mb's and up so they take up a lot of space - Also have a look at the black viper website he has plenty of tips to lighten the load and remove rubbish you never need http://www.blackviper.com/
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Programs will almost certainly not work by copying them, there's too much configuration to get right.
You must re-install.
But you need to backup your personal data, photos, letters, docs, etc.
each operating system: windows, mac, linux, offers some type of backup.
but those will usually store the backup in a format you cannot access easily.
what follows mimics what those systems do.
---
- This is a "poor man's" backup strategy, manual, reliable as you, probably works.
- get two external USB HD drives, say 4TB or so, plug then in, format them. We'll call them hd1 and hd2
- copy files from computer to hd1
- copy hd1 to hd2
- Resist the urge to use one of them them as a working directory, they should be a backup, not your every day workspace.
- when you get the new computer, copy hd1 to new computer.
- once you're up and running, manually once a week:
* copy new files/dirs to hd1
* copy hd1 to hd2
- tim
I use Tim's "poor man backup" scheme in an even more frugal manner - only have 1 external HD. I manually copy the files then lock up the HD in a fire-proof, nuclear-hardened location that is temperature controlled and free from animal dander or other allergens.
It takes time to do those backups however so I've started using a backup program. The first backup takes time but the subsequent backups (echo mode) are just what changed. Much quicker.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SyncToy
I back up libraries separately to make transition to a new computer easier: Documents, Pictures, Music, and the desktop files.
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