Upgrading from HDD to SSD

I received a HP 2000 2b43dx laptop as a gift. I increased the ram from 4GB to 8GB but that did not help the performance very much. I realize that the performance is limited mostly by the cpu which is AMD E-300 running at 1.3 MHZ.  I don't think it is possible to easily upgrade the cpu so I would like to replace the 320GB 5400 rpm HDD with a Samsung 840 EVO 250GB SSD. It looks like Samsung data migration software should work ok for cloning the existing HDD (except it does not carry over the OEM recovery partition).  I made a USB copy of the recovery partition and since I have recently upgraded from Win 8 to 8.1 I hope I never have to go back to square 1 with the recovery partition. 
First limitation for the upgrade is that I have SATA II instead of SATA III but that is not supposed to be a major limitation.  Second limitation is that apparently HP consumer laptops such as mine have a locked BIOS so it is not possible to activate AHCI through the BIOS. Also device manager only displays AMD SATA controller and no AHCI SATA controller.  I was hoping that this would not be a major problem because supposedly the Samsung Magician SSD management software allows to you to manually manage the SSD performance.  BUT when I read the user manual for Samsung Magician:
(http://downloadcenter.samsung.com/content/SW/201401/20140128164030078/Magician_English_Installation_...
The Magician manual (page 5) states that it does not work with AMD chipsets with AMD drivers which my model has.  This is a major limiting factor because use of the magician software is critical for making sure the SSD is working correctly.  Is it possible to switch from AMD drivers to Microsoft or Nvidia drivers so I can use the Samsung Magician software?  Any references to sources and methods would be appreciated.
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Don't overthink it. The BIOS is set to ahci by default and invisibly. Windows 8 and 8.1 manage SSDs natively so there is nothing you really need to do. Clone the old drive to the new and go. The only thing to be careful about when you are cloing is not to shrink the sytem reserved partitions. If you do that things like Windows Backup, which use the system reserved partition, will no longer function and if the system partitions are shrunk too much the system will fail to boot. That can be repaired with a repair disk but it is a pain you want to avoid. So use a manual clone option and keep all but the main C:\ partition the same size. 
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