Forum Discussion
As far as using the USB goes, can it be just a regular USB or does it need to be a specific one? Also- is there any benefit to creating a local Windows account instead of sticking with my Microsoft account?
I don't know if this has any effect but my laptop is still active and using my current Windows account that is being used by my PC as well. I assume this shouldn't have any effect?
@Fl0raSpirit I would suggest using USB 3.0 (or higher, if anyone makes them) rather than 2.0 just for the increased speed, but it's not strictly necessary. The only critical point is that the USB needs to use a connection that your computer supports, but Type A is pretty universal.
The benefit to creating a local Windows account is that you don't have OneDrive automatically moving your user folders around and then subsequent confusion when your files start disappearing. I'm not saying they will disappear, only that I've seen it happen a lot, plus other issues related to full OneDrive storage or failed syncing or syncing old files. It's simpler to avoid all that in the first place.
You can link your Microsoft account to the PC later without involving OneDrive, but the only way to avoid OneDrive from the start is to create a local account first. When the first Windows account you create is linked to your Microsoft account, OneDrive inserts itself automatically, with no user choice given.
The setup with your laptop shouldn't affect any of this.