Acquiring Windows Install CDs...

Here are the different XP CD's you need.

XP Home OEM
XP Home Full
XP Home Upgrade

XP Pro OEM
XP Pro Full
XP Pro Upgrade

XP Pro Cooperate Edition

XP Media Edition Disk 1
XP Media Edition Disk 2
XP Media Edition Integrated


And remember on Vista the "Upgrade Edition" will install on a bare machine it does not look for any files before the install - this has been tested in Vista Service pack 1 (http://windowssecrets.com/) this is a great site. So that is one less Vista CD to carry
 
#1: I believe you mean "volume license edition", not "cooperate". And there's also the Action Pack Subscription edition, but that's really rare. A home user will *never* have that edition, unless they bought a used corporate machine AND the corporation was small, lazy, and/or cheap.

#2: Vista comes on DVDs, and all seven Vista version have the same DVD. One, identical DVD, the different license keys install different versions. So you only really need the one.
 
I picked up a home built PC last night that had Windows errors. The guy did not have his CD's, so I ran a repair using a Dell XP w/SP2 CD. I get done with the repair, and it now wants to activate with Microsoft. I can't locate a Windows XP CD on his machine case. Any ideas on how to make this work? Is this because I used the Dell CD?
 
I picked up a home built PC last night that had Windows errors. The guy did not have his CD's, so I ran a repair using a Dell XP w/SP2 CD. I get done with the repair, and it now wants to activate with Microsoft. I can't locate a Windows XP CD on his machine case. Any ideas on how to make this work? Is this because I used the Dell CD?

That is where I try not to be I need them to provide me with something that proves they have a legitimate copy. I am not saying that this one isn't but we are with out a key, cd, or sticker. I don't put the sticker on my PCs that are for my use but I have a box with all that in it, usually the motherboard box they are perfect for it. I would say it is either becuase you used a different CD or becuase they were not running a legit copy before.
 
Short version: No, it's not the Dell CD, it's that he needs a license key.

Long version: Dell's CDs automatically install a version with a Dell license key - *not* the one on the case sticker, but that doesn't matter, because you have the legit one on the case sticker, so it doesn't matter what one's on the machine as long as it's the same version.

However, the Dell copy of Windows is also set up for the Dell hardware on the Dell machine the CD was made for, and, when it doesn't recognise the Dell hardware, it figures you just made a big hardware change.

And since you just made a large hardware change, you have to reactivate Windows.

And since this is a *huge* hardware change - a completely "new" system according to the Dell installation - it fails reactivation.

Right now, there are two possibilities:

A) The guy has a legit retail Windows license, you've just installed an OEM copy that he DOESN'T have a license for, but there's really no harm done and you can reactivate by phone. Tell it to activate by phone, call the MS rep, tell them you just reinstalled Windows, yes this copy is only installed on one machine, and they'll give you a key to manually activate it.

B) The guy doesn't have a legit license at all. In which case, you can still activate it over the phone, but then you're a party to software piracy.

There is no C - if he had a legit OEM license, the sticker would be on his machine, because OEMs are legally required to do so by the license itself. Some people don't do that when they build their own machines, but that's their call. No reputable computer store will do it for someone they don't know really well.

You're in a bit of a bind.

My solution:
Tell him that without evidence of a license, you cannot activate Windows for him. Let *him* call Microsoft and talk to the rep and put in the code. Or sell him a new copy of Windows, but I really don't suspect he'll take kindly to the $500 price tag on XP Pro Retail, and you can't get XP Home any more. So, if it's legit, tell him he has to do it because he can't prove it, and if it's not legit, tell him he has to do it because then it's his act of piracy, not yours.


In the future, ALWAYS get a license key before reinstalling Windows. Either get it off the sticker, out of the retail packaging, or out of the Windows installation itself using a program like Keyfinder.
 
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