this post was submitted on 05 Apr 2024
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That's not OP's point. The point is that you can't just move the hard drive from your laptop to your desktop and expect your old OS installation to just work.
Oh, why not? Is it not similar to booting from a USB drive? The OS is Arch Linux and the drive is not encrypted.
Oh, I assumed too much. I thought you had Windows installed, so I don't know how similar Linux is in these circumstances.
I would assume that a local installation may have configuration that is unique to your laptop's hardware.
The OS may be smart enough to recognize that some things changed and adapt accordingly. But some old drivers and config settings may still unnecessarily linger around and waste disk space or CPU cycles. And hardware driver conflicts could also lead to system crashes.
Maybe I'm wrong, though?
Hmm, I do have some battery-specific configs, but they shouldn't make a difference, and they're trivial to deactivate.
The Linux kernel generally includes drivers for anything you could want, so I'm not concerned about crashes related to drivers.
Thanks for the concern anyway :)