J
jan
I have been reading around on the internet about this annoying new term in
the Vista EULA which states you can only move the OS to a new system once,
and any significant upgrades to the current system will count as it being a
new PC. I have seen theat they have changed the retail EULA so that this is
no longer the case but i had my PC built be Scan and it has the OEM version.
How resttrictive is this? For example, i backup my PC onto an external
harddrive, if my main harddrive fails and i restore windows to a new drive,
Vista will make me reactivate my license and that is my last chance!
Also, does reformatting and reinstalling the OS count as a go or does this
not count because the hardware signature of the PC is still the same.
I think the fact that changing the hard-drive makes you reinstall is
ridiculous, many people want to upgrade to a larger HDD and this now
restricts you.
the Vista EULA which states you can only move the OS to a new system once,
and any significant upgrades to the current system will count as it being a
new PC. I have seen theat they have changed the retail EULA so that this is
no longer the case but i had my PC built be Scan and it has the OEM version.
How resttrictive is this? For example, i backup my PC onto an external
harddrive, if my main harddrive fails and i restore windows to a new drive,
Vista will make me reactivate my license and that is my last chance!
Also, does reformatting and reinstalling the OS count as a go or does this
not count because the hardware signature of the PC is still the same.
I think the fact that changing the hard-drive makes you reinstall is
ridiculous, many people want to upgrade to a larger HDD and this now
restricts you.