Norton Ghost and Activating XP

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Thread: Norton Ghost and Activating XP

  1. #1
    Chomp Chomp PinchyCM's Avatar
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    Norton Ghost and Activating XP

    Hey guys, this seems like a pretty intuitive question, but if I register XP, make an image of it with ghost, and just install windows with that, i won't have to worry about installing it again, would i? it sounds like it'd be allright...
    c2d e6600, gigabyte ga-965p-ds3 3.3, x1950pro, 3gb ddr2 800

  2. #2
    Crash Test Dummy SkyDog's Avatar
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    So long as you don't restore the Ghost image onto different hardware, you shouldn't be prompted for activation again after you load the Ghost image.

  3. #3
    By the Power of Greyskull Colossus's Avatar
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    You are allowed to change a minimal amount of hardware until you are required to register again...

    Now if you had a XP Pro Corp.. That skips the reg

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  4. #4
    Great White Shark Terry's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Colossus
    You are allowed to change a minimal amount of hardware until you are required to register again...
    What if I change just a little bit each time?
    Then MS will have time to adapt (and assimilate)

    Originally posted by Colossus
    Now if you had a XP Pro Corp.. That skips the reg
    WOW, That is brand new information!
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  5. #5
    Crash Test Dummy SkyDog's Avatar
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    Originally posted by Terry
    What if I change just a little bit each time?
    Then MS will have time to adapt (and assimilate)
    Nope, you'll hit a threshold where you have to re-activate. (There's just no way to change a "little bit" of a motherboard.)

    Originally posted by Terry
    WOW, That is brand new information!
    The volume license edition (aka "corporate version") doesn't require activation because there's no way in @#$% that one of Microsoft's business customers is going to go through the activation process for each of the thousands of machines on a network!

    In order to use the volume license edition, you need a copy of volume license media and a volume license key. These are generally sold to large companies or organizations with at least a few hundred machines, so you won't generally find 'em in your local software shop.

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