If _Microsoft_ approved every transaction, why worry or even
bother with what an _MVP_ spouts. A basic fact is that one
cannot give legal advice without being licensed.
Hugh wrote:
| I admit to being thoroughly confused, especially as MS has approved
| every transaction in this odyssey. The other computers are completely
| under my control, and no duplicate of this OS exists.
| What does this mean: " If the
| SOFTWARE is not accompanied by new HARDWARE, you may
| not use the SOFTWARE." This OS is currently installed in a
| computer with completely new hardware, which seems to comply with the
| EULA (And MS seems to agree, as they keep giving me new permissions
| to do this).
| I find it hard to believe that I have to trash a $90.00 piece of
| software when the computer reaches the end of its useful life.
|
| * Software as a Component of the Computer - Transfer. THIS
| LICENSE MAY NOT BE SHARED,
| TRANSFERRED TO OR USED CONCURRENTLY
| ON DIFFERENT COMPUTERS. The SOFTWARE
| is licensed with the HARDWARE as a single integrated
| product and may only be used with the HARDWARE. If the
| SOFTWARE is not accompanied by new HARDWARE, you may
| not use the SOFTWARE. You may permanently transfer all
| of your rights under this EULA only as part of a
| permanent sale or transfer of the HARDWARE, provided
| you retain no copies, if you transfer all of the SOFTWARE
| (including all component parts, the media and printed
| materials, any upgrades, this EULA and the Certificate
| of Authenticity), and the recipient agrees to the terms
| of this EULA. If the SOFTWARE is an upgrade, any
| transfer must also include all prior versions of the
| SOFTWARE.
|
| "Colin Barnhorst" wrote:
|
|| Ron is correct. While OEM cd's may vary, the OEM license does not.
|| Just because you can install some OEM cd's on a second or third
|| computer does not mean that their licenses are any different. It
|| just means the licenses are not as strongly enforced in software.
||
|| --
|| Colin Barnhorst [MVP Windows - Virtual Machine]
|| (Reply to the group only unless otherwise requested)
|| ||| My XP Home CD came with a Clone system from Computer Renaissance.
||| Both "OEM" and "Activate Windows" are present.
||| I upgraded the original PC to XP Pro, then installed the original
||| XP Home OS
||| on an older PC I had lying around. Re-activation was required, and
||| it was a
||| breeze.
||| I subsequently replaced the older PC with a completely new system I
||| built about three weeks ago and installed XP Home from the
||| original CD. Activation
||| was required and went through with no problem.
||| I then installed the x64 Beta of XP Pro on the new system. Gave
||| that up after a few days because of driver issues , formatted and
||| re-installed the original XP Home OS, no activation was required.
||| This sems to be at odds with what you are saying, " All OEM
||| versions of Windows XP (in fact all OEM versions of all
||| Microsoft software) are permanently tied to the first computer that
||| they are installed on. So you cannot legitimately transfer your OEM
||| license to another computer under any circumstances, even if the
||| original computer is lost, stolen, destroyed, or scrapped."
||| Was I just lucky or is there something I'm missing here?
|||
||| "Ron Martell" wrote:
|||
||||
||||| I am buying a new PC which will come with XP Pro (and its CD)
|||||
||||| - if I upgrade, reformat or replace the PC, will XP Pro still
||||| work?
||||| - is it any different for XP Home?
|||||
||||| Please could someone either explain or provide a link to one
|||||
||||| Many thanks
|||||
||||| Jerry
|||||
||||
|||| If your Windows XP came bundled with the computer then it is almost
|||| certainly an OEM version. You can check this by opening Control
|||| Panel - System - General and looking at the Product I.D. value
|||| reported in the last line of the "Registered to:" section. If the
|||| Product I.D. contains the letters OEM rather than a 3 digit number
|||| in the second segment then you have an OEM version of Windows XP.
||||
|||| If you have an OEM version of Windows XP then the next thing to
|||| check is to see if yours is one of the "BIOS locked" OEM versions
|||| provided by one of the major brand computer manufacturers. Use
|||| Start - All Programs - Accessories - System Tools and see if there
|||| is a menu item listed there for "Activate Windows". If there is
|||| no "Activate Windows" item then yours is almost certainly a BIOS
|||| locked OEM version. If the "Activate Windows" item is present on
|||| the System Tools menu and if the Product I.D. contains the letters
|||| OEM then you have what is termed a "Generic OEM" version which has
|||| some differences from the BIOS locked versions.
||||
|||| All OEM versions of Windows XP (in fact all OEM versions of all
|||| Microsoft software) are permanently tied to the first computer that
|||| they are installed on. So you cannot legitimately transfer your
|||| OEM license to another computer under any circumstances, even if
|||| the original computer is lost, stolen, destroyed, or scrapped.
||||
|||| You can, however, upgrade the components in the computer (with some
|||| exceptions) or replace failed components (again with exceptions)
|||| and still use the OEM license on that machine. The exceptions to
|||| this are with regard to BIOS locked versions. With the recent
|||| changes to the activation process by Microsoft it is not
|||| permissible to upgrade the motherboard on a computer with a BIOS
|||| locked OEM version of Windows XP. The activation process will
|||| fail and Microsoft reportedly will not do a manual activation in
|||| this circumstance. If such a system were to suffer a motherboard
|||| failure and the replacement motherboard was provided by the
|||| original manufacturer under warranty then a manual activation will
|||| be done. But if the computer is out of warranty and/or if this
|||| replacement motherboard is not from the original
|||| manufacturer/assembler of the computer then it apparently will
|||| not.
||||
|||| Please note that this activation change is very recent and there is
|||| very little in the way of "hands on" experience with it as yet.
|||| And it may be subject to further changes if there are unintended
|||| adverse consequences resulting from it.
||||
|||| Hope this is of some assistance.
||||
|||| Good luck
||||
||||
|||| Ron Martell Duncan B.C. Canada
|||| --
|||| Microsoft MVP
|||| On-Line Help Computer Service
||||
http://onlinehelp.bc.ca
||||
|||| "The reason computer chips are so small is computers don't eat
|||| much."