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Unuseful for new PC

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Hello

Just bought a brand new HP laptop with an Intel i5 11st gen, SKHynix SSD M.2; after a personal setup and updates, I decide to clone it saving on an external drive

Since here, no problems since 8 years I'm using ATI, but

Booting from USB, ATI doesn't see the laptop's drive and the touchpad doesn't work

I decide to remake the bootable USB pendrive including the Intel drivers and the Synaptics ones

NO WAY, ATI don't want to see other than  external drive connected and the touchpad still not working

As a laptop, in the BIOS you don't have any "Legacy" option

I suppose that the compatibility of this kind of software walk side by side to the other tecnologies, instead it's still (and stuck) supporting older hardware

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What type of rescue media have you been creating and where have you been doing the creation?

For your HP laptop, you should install ATI on that laptop and create the 'Simple' version of the rescue media (that takes the WinPE files from the Windows Recovery Environment, along with device drivers for installed devices such as your M.2 SSD).

All rescue media is capable of being booted in both UEFI + Secure Boot or Legacy boot modes to support a wide range of different PC systems.

Note: please check whether your M.2 SSD has BitLocker enabled & encrypted as there is no support by default in the rescue media for encryption - this has to be added.

See KB 65508: Acronis True Image 2021: how to create bootable media and KB 59877: Acronis True Image: how to distinguish between UEFI and Legacy BIOS boot modes of Acronis Bootable Media

I use Windows version of ATI on one PC only, for the others devices I use a bootable USB pendrive

Since ATI has included features not wanted that consumes a lot of PC resources, I don't install it (and buy it anymore) on any other PC

I did the bootable pendrive with all the drivers needed, but also this feature is absolutely unuseful

Supermatico,

Can you show or tell us what Device Manager shows for installed controllers on your new laptop?  It could be that even though Intel runs the SATA Storage Controller on your PC it does not run the PCIe side of storage.  Normally the PCIe storage is run by the PCH controller and I believe that in some cases MS is now providing native drivers for NVM Express storage devices.  If this is true in your case you would need to add in the MS native drivers for your NVMe disk.  See screenshot below:

 

image 497

 

 

I had the same problem as the original poster with my brand new HP laptop.

Finally this was my way using MVP_ATIPEBuilder_v186 and ADK 10:

  1.  Locate or create the winre.wim of the new computer.
  2.  Convert the winre.wim into a winpe.wim using a powershell script from the web: New-WinPE.ps1 found on osdeploy.com
  3. Adapt the script to your environment.
  4. Go to L:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10\Assessment and Deployment Kit\Windows Preinstallation Environment\amd64\en-us
  5. Rename the winpe.wim file to something like o-winpe.wim.
  6. Copy the new winpe.wim from step 2.
  7. Build a boot device with MVP_ATIPEBuilder.
  8. Test the boot device with your new laptop.
  9. Don't forget to undo the changes of step 4 & 5!!!

The new USB device works with my old systems too (i. e. Core i5-2xxx).

hth Wolf