Buy a USB 3.0 2.5" Sata enclosure for about 30 bucks. Pop your shiny new Intel SSD into the enclosure. Throw in your shiny new intel CD into your PC. Install the Acronis software. Plug in your USB enclosure. Run the Acronis software, the wizard automagically migrates your internal hard drive data to the Intel one*. Swap the drives. Your PC should now boot into windows in about 1/4 of the time it took before. If it doesn't then you can always plug in your original untouched drive. If you're happy with the changes then you've got a spiffy exteral USB 3 drive for backup and/or movies and suchlike. Finally, run the Intel optimisation software that's on the included CD. There's fark all to change in the BIOS on pretty much anything that's running Windows 7.
Very similar process for A-data drives except the bundled acronis software has a bit more hassle involving registering it and bunging in the license key that's printed on the SSD drive.
The Intel and A-data drives (and Samsung I think but I can't be arsed looking in the workshop now) have 3 year warranty. Regardless, you should be doing a bare-metal backup (the Win 7 built in one is fine) if you give a toss about your data. Not much point in getting stuff with longer warranty...a).the warranty process is generally a PITA b) in 3 years time the drives will be worth tuppence anyway.
*you may have to run free for home use - Euasus partition tool to resize your original partition if it's larger than the SSD you're cloning to. - again wizard based and piece of piss.
http://www.partition-tool.com/.. If it's a customer PC then I always backup before repartitioning but to be honest, I've only had one issue (really fooked sectors on the hard drive) in about 20 years.
The Intel 320 series is a good budget SSD that you'll be very happy with for the money IMHO. On an average consumer system the higher end stuff is just a waste of money.
Any SSD gives massive battery gains too (normally see 30 mins to 1 hour increase on newish laptops). The other components in your laptop will draw more power so I certainly wouldn't pay over the odds for an SSD that's more power efficient. I'd spend the change on a spare battery myself.
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