MadalinStroe: I can't comment on your recommendation, as I have never heard of it, but I'd like to also mention another piece of software. I have a friend whose job is to repair computers. And when it comes to drivers, the company he works for, uses:
Snappy Driver Installer. It's an "open source", "Patreon funded" project, that he recommended, and it worked superbly for me.
Sounds very interesting too. I'll certainly try this one and the slimwareutilities if I need to find drivers, thanks for the heads up !
MadalinStroe: Files on any HDD are very rarely written contiguously, from start to finish, on successive sectors. Usually, they are split, according to the free sectors available. So if you try to copy/access a very specific file, such as the PaleMoon bookmarks, the actuator arm will have to jump from sector to sector, in order to read the complete file.
Clonezilla doesn't care about individual files. It will literally read the first sector on the disk, then move to the second, third and so on, until it reaches the last sector. All in one go, thus causing much less wear on your dying disk.
The cloning process will just create a .iso image file. If there were bad sectors on the dying disk, they will only be marked as bad sectors in the image file, but it will in no way affect the safe disk on which Clonezilla is writing the image file.
I understand a lot more how much it's useful ! But... The partition I want to backup is very big : 900Go of data to save. I'm afraid of the very long time it would take if it tries to do EVERYTHING in one run: what happens if it can't goes until the end the process ? (for example the harddrive shut down itself)(or even die ?) The iso will be broken & useless?
I'm currently backing up datas, and it says speed of a bit more than 4Mo/s, which is really nice if the disk is really dying. No ?
timppu: In my opinion, no need to touch them unless something doesn't work at all. As said, I usually manually install only GPU (graphics) drivers on top of what the vanilla Windows installs, and that's that. On that one eMachines laptop I also had to install wifi drivers, vanilla Windows 7 didn't apparently have suitable drivers for its wifi adapter.
I recall sometime also hunting for Windows 7 USB 3.0 drivers for my ASUS laptop because I was having some reliability issues with USB 3.0 external hard drives (they'd just be disconnected when in use), but later even that didn't seem to be necessary anymore.
I remember I saw an article on the web who talked about driver update utilities who basically said "as long that it works, don't bother too much with drivers" (it was
here but I don't know how much trustworthy it is). But I think that some good exceptions of this kind of softwares may happens, so maybe I'll try one of the driver utility software suggested by our pals here even if I don't "need" to : with a clean install I won't risk a lot and I will do a strong antivirus/malware scan after to see if anything is suspicious is there (but I want to specify that I'm trusting our two pals :)). I'll see what happens, I still have to purchase the harddrive.
Maybe I was having this issue on my PC : I remember one external harddrive who was simply stopping working when plugged in if you tried to move some "big" files. But there wasn't any issue on another comp'. Probably a driver issue ? (I remember I was plugging it on a usb 3 port)(but on this same comp', I didn't encountered issues with other usb 3 external harddrive).
timppu: Have you seen some specific benefits running such overall driver update on everything? Better performance, or just more reliable?
I'm curious too :)
timppu: I guess I usually think "if it isn't broken, don't fix it", but GPU drivers I try to keep up to date because at least in the past new NVidia Geforce drivers gave quite a big performance increase (10-20% or something like that), and once with Intel HD GPU a driver update magically made many older games work great, e.g. Empire Earth (which before that was unplayable due to graphical glitches on Intel HD Graphics).
That sound worth enough to take a look, even if now I'm mainly thinking too the same way : as long as it works, avoid any unnecessary manipulation.