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-- Product Activation: OfficeXP (http://discussion.visorcentral.com/vcforum/showthread.php?threadid=19578)
Product Activation: OfficeXP
I know that the Product Activation scheme for Windows XP resets after 120 days, allowing additional installations at this interval. What about Office XP?
I don't know. I'd think it'd be similar. But I wouldn't "test" it because it could result in having to bow down and beg Bill Gates to use Office again.
Re: Product Activation: OfficeXP
quote:
Originally posted by Keefer Lucas
I know that the Product Activation scheme for Windows XP resets after 120 days, allowing additional installations at this interval. What about Office XP?
App-propriate Uses
You can reinstall Windows XP once every 120 days, and it is treated as a "viginal" installation, that is to say, your perceived limitation on hardware upgrades won't matter unless they all fall withing 120 days. If you do a major upgrade within that timeframe you need to call Microsoft for a manual authorization.
What has me concerned about this more than anything is the length of time it may take me to get through....if I have to call for a manual re-authorization will it take me two hours just to reach a human who can help me?
I've read all this as it pertains to Windows XP. I am just wondering if it pertains to Office XP as well.
Re: App-propriate Uses
quote:
Originally posted by Keefer Lucas
I am just wondering if it pertains to Office XP as well.
__________________

God bless America, my home sweet home...
It can seriously be installed only once in 120 days? I guess I'm out as I'm a compulsive formatter... Once every 2 - 3 months if I'm lucky.
Ark.
Re: App-propriate Uses
quote:
Originally posted by Keefer Lucas
You can reinstall Windows XP once every 120 days, and it is treated as a "viginal" installation, that is to say, your perceived limitation on hardware upgrades won't matter unless they all fall withing 120 days. If you do a major upgrade within that timeframe you need to call Microsoft for a manual authorization.
What has me concerned about this more than anything is the length of time it may take me to get through....if I have to call for a manual re-authorization will it take me two hours just to reach a human who can help me?
I've read all this as it pertains to Windows XP. I am just wondering if it pertains to Office XP as well.
I've heard that MS planed to stop support for all versions of Windows below 2000 the day that XP came out.
I think there is a slight misunderstanding about how WPA works here. The 120 days is the time period for which the system notes a change in the hardware, more that 6 changes in different pieces of hardware in that 120 day period, and you may need to reactivate. (Changing the NIC may shorten the number of pieces of hardware, as this is considered a key piece of the activation key) On a machine that came with XP pre-installed from the factory, the only thing that it keys off of is the BIOS version, so you could change everything without triggering a reactivation. As for reinstalling the Windows XP, this is directly from Microsoft's site.
quote:
If a reinstallation of the software is needed, is reactivation required?
Not always. If the same version of the software is reinstalled on the same machine and the hard disk is not reformatted prior to reinstalling, the software will remain activated. Reactivation will be required if the hard disk is reformatted and the software is reinstalled. This is because the software's activation status is stored on the hard drive and reformatting the hard drive erases that status.
__________________
Sven
If at first you do succeed, try not to look astonished.
quote:
Originally posted by creole
I've heard that MS planed to stop support for all versions of Windows below 2000 the day that XP came out.
__________________
Sven
If at first you do succeed, try not to look astonished.
Found it!
I found Microsoft's "Windows Desktop Product Lifecycle Guidelines," and I was slightly incorrect in my earlier posting. Windows 95, 3.xx, NT 3.5x and DOS x.xx will continue to be supported through the end of the year. All future products will follow the schedule they laid out. (Unless they change it later.
) You can look at the lifecycle for all their products here.
__________________
Sven
If at first you do succeed, try not to look astonished.
quote:
Originally posted by sdoersam
For the record, I'm not a big fan of Product Activation either, but it has been made to sound worse than it is.
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