djqcquinn said:
I've recently custom built my own computer and have my XP
installation CD. The one thing I forgot to do was remove the serila
sticker from my old case before stripping the system and binning
the rest.
Now I have an original XP pro CD with no serial - is there any way
of finding out what the serial is from the actual CD itself??
Any help is greatly appreciated - as I don't see why I should have
to buy another copy.
Why you should have to buy another copy?...
Well - because you agreed to it - or at least from what I can deduce from
this posting - you did.
"... The one thing I forgot to do was remove the [serial] sticker from my
old case ..."
" ... Now I have an original XP pro CD with no serial ..."
Sounds to me like you had a computer before that was pre-built for you
and/or you purchased an 'inexpensive' version of Windows XP Professional
(called an OEM licensed version) and installed and utilized it on the old
computer. In doing that - you agreed to the End-User License Agreement
(EULA) - and in the OEM EULA, it does point out that the OEM software
(Windows XP Professional) cannot be transferred to anothr machine once it is
installed/activated. This means that if your old machine had cought on fire
and melted to slag - but somehow the sticker and CD survived - you - in
agreement with the EULA - should just destroy those items as well.
This is one of the largest (IMO) disadvantages in getting an OEM licensed
versions of a Windows operating system - and surprisingly (although it gets
posted likely a few times a week somewhere on the Internet for at least the
last 7 years or so) many people seem unaware of this (because who wants to
read up on things like that and/or read the agreement on the computer they
just bought?)
So - no matter what you get told otherwise - according the the agreement
that you supposedly agreed to (just by using the old system) you have lost
that version of Windows XP Professional for good by getting rid of the
machine it was originally installed and activated upon and that you utilized
for however long.
This is *not* a technical (in most cases) limitation.
So - even given it is not a technical limitation and if you don't mind
breaking the agreement - you are at a point where you do not have the old
machine nor access to it (I assume) - which puts you "Out of Luck". You
will be purchasing/obtaining a new operating system (license/product
key/etc.)