January 9, 2008

Product Activation

Activating XP or Vista is now a necessary evil, and other software manufacturers are following suite. Why? Because it does prevent piracy to a point. Fortunately or unfortunately, it doesn't stop it.

Here are a few facts about activating:



  • If you activate using the phone, prepare to read a 50-digit identification key to the customer support rep at Microsoft. The last time I did this, I recited this code to a voice activated machine. I guess Microsoft ran out of people to answer phone calls regarding activation...


  • You have 30 days in which to activate after initial installation.

  • Activation is NOT registration. This process is completely anonymous, or so Microsoft claims.

  • You can install and reinstall XP an unlimited number of times on the same hardware.

  • If you replace or upgrade four or more hardware components in less than 120 days, Microsoft will assume you've just installed XP on another system---yes, a new activation code will be required.

  • For laptops, Microsoft allows you to upgrade 7 hardware components before they suspect you are license tampering. For a list of "fingerprint" components see the list below.

  • Some copies of XP may be exempt from activation, but in these cases the operating system is tied directly to the BIOS on a particular system. This is called SLP or System Locked Pre-Installation.

  • Some businesses are also exempt from activation through a VL (Volume Licensing) agreement. Microsoft couldn't possible afford to piss-off their big order customers.

List of "fingerprint" Components:



  • Video Display Adapter

  • Primary Hard Disk

  • Volume Serial Number

  • SCSI Adapter

  • IDE Disk Controller

  • CD-ROM Drive

  • Network Adapter (MAC)

  • CPU Type

  • CPU Serial Number

  • RAM

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I never knew this... thanks. Beth