![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi there,
My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Generally, you may upgrade or replace all of the hardware components on your
customer's computer and the end user may maintain the license for the original Microsoft® OEM operating system software, with the exception of an upgrade or replacement of the motherboard. An upgrade of the motherboard is considered to result in a "new personal computer" to which Microsoft® OEM operating system software cannot be transferred from another computer. If the motherboard is upgraded or replaced for reasons other than a defect, then a new computer has been created and the license of new operating system software is required. If the motherboard is replaced because it is defective, you do NOT need to acquire a new operating system license for the PC as long as the replacement motherboard is the same make andmodel or the same manufacturer’s replacement/equivalent, as defined by the manufacturer’s warranty. "KDagnell" wrote: Hi there, My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
KDagnell wrote:
Hi there, My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? If you just add a new motherboard to your pc then you will not need to transfer anything as windows is on the hard drive. If you are installing to a new pc you can install your OEM onto the new PC providing it is not stil being used on the broken PC. However, if your OEM version is not one you purchased seperately but one you got preinstaled onto the hard drive with a restore disc then it probably will not work. Most preinstalled versions and their backups will only run on the PC it was first installed to. My Acer computer has an oem which is tied to the computer. On the product key sticker it says "Windows XP Home Acer Incorporated" - that means its tied to that machine. My new OEM Home which I bought yesterday has on it "windows xp home oem software". Check what your label says. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
KDagnell wrote:
Hi there, My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? There are many posts regarding this and many different answers and interpretations. The short answer is you should have no difficulties if done properly. There is nothing improper about repairing a system. I have done this successfully. You will most likely be required to reactivate which is what I did by phone. I was told there is never a problem if you are adding hardware which includes every piece including the CPU. Good Luck. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Read the oem Licensing agreement - Installing a new motherboard (except under
centain warranty conditions) and proceeding to install an already used/activated copy of Windows OEM is a breach of the OEM license! Read the excerpt from microsoft oem system builder website in the first reply to this post! CRaven Microsoft Licensing Sales Specialist "Beck" wrote: KDagnell wrote: Hi there, My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? If you just add a new motherboard to your pc then you will not need to transfer anything as windows is on the hard drive. If you are installing to a new pc you can install your OEM onto the new PC providing it is not stil being used on the broken PC. However, if your OEM version is not one you purchased seperately but one you got preinstaled onto the hard drive with a restore disc then it probably will not work. Most preinstalled versions and their backups will only run on the PC it was first installed to. My Acer computer has an oem which is tied to the computer. On the product key sticker it says "Windows XP Home Acer Incorporated" - that means its tied to that machine. My new OEM Home which I bought yesterday has on it "windows xp home oem software". Check what your label says. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Read the oem Licensing agreement - Installing a new motherboard (except under
centain warranty conditions) and proceeding to install an already used/activated copy of Windows OEM is a breach of the OEM license! Read the excerpt from microsoft OEM system builder website in the first reply to this post! The only way that a processor or motherboard can be changed (without warranty issues) is on a Full Packaged Retail Product! The lisence on OEM operating systems is married to the computer (the Motherborad , CPU and other essential components) not the user and that is specifically why reinstalling on a new motherboard is a breach of the license! CRaven Micrsosoft Licensing Sales Specialist "Johnathan" wrote: KDagnell wrote: Hi there, My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? There are many posts regarding this and many different answers and interpretations. The short answer is you should have no difficulties if done properly. There is nothing improper about repairing a system. I have done this successfully. You will most likely be required to reactivate which is what I did by phone. I was told there is never a problem if you are adding hardware which includes every piece including the CPU. Good Luck. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
CRaven wrote:
Generally, you may upgrade or replace all of the hardware components on your customer's computer and the end user may maintain the license for the original Microsoft® OEM operating system software, with the exception of an upgrade or replacement of the motherboard. False. I just upgraded mine (OEM generic) and it activated online no problem, passed WGA no problem. An upgrade of the motherboard is considered to result in a "new personal computer" to which Microsoft® OEM operating system software cannot be transferred from another computer. False. If the motherboard is upgraded or replaced for reasons other than a defect, then a new computer has been created and the license of new operating system software is required. False. If the motherboard is replaced because it is defective, you do NOT need to acquire a new operating system license for the PC as long as the replacement motherboard is the same make andmodel or the same manufacturer’s replacement/equivalent, as defined by the manufacturer’s warranty. False. That said if the OP's OEM is a branded OEM, you can't upgrade the motherboard, only replace it with an identical motherboard. If it's a generic OEM, you can upgrade any hardware you like. My EULA says *nothing* about a motherboard. Alias "KDagnell" wrote: Hi there, My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
CRaven wrote:
Read the oem Licensing agreement - Installing a new motherboard (except under centain warranty conditions) and proceeding to install an already used/activated copy of Windows OEM is a breach of the OEM license! False. Read your EULA and get back to us. I am assuming, of course, that you have a generic OEM. If you have a branded OEM, you can't do it for technical reasons, not EULA reasons. Read the excerpt from microsoft oem system builder website in the first reply to this post! CRaven Microsoft Licensing Sales Specialist I have three computers. All three have generic OEMs on them. I am not a systems builder so that EULA doesn't apply to me, only the one I agreed to, of course, and the one I agreed to says *nothing* about a motherboard! In fact, I just upgraded the motherboard on one of my computers and it passed WPA and all four WGAs so you were saying??? Alias "Beck" wrote: KDagnell wrote: Hi there, My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? If you just add a new motherboard to your pc then you will not need to transfer anything as windows is on the hard drive. If you are installing to a new pc you can install your OEM onto the new PC providing it is not stil being used on the broken PC. However, if your OEM version is not one you purchased seperately but one you got preinstaled onto the hard drive with a restore disc then it probably will not work. Most preinstalled versions and their backups will only run on the PC it was first installed to. My Acer computer has an oem which is tied to the computer. On the product key sticker it says "Windows XP Home Acer Incorporated" - that means its tied to that machine. My new OEM Home which I bought yesterday has on it "windows xp home oem software". Check what your label says. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
CRaven wrote:
Read the oem Licensing agreement - Installing a new motherboard (except under centain warranty conditions) and proceeding to install an already used/activated copy of Windows OEM is a breach of the OEM license! That's not what my three EULAs say. Why do you lie? Read the excerpt from microsoft OEM system builder website in the first reply to this post! Um, the OP is not a systems builder. The only way that a processor or motherboard can be changed (without warranty issues) is on a Full Packaged Retail Product! False. I just upgraded one of my computers to a new motherboard, video card, NIC and audio card. After clean installing XP HOme, it activated online and passed all the WGAs. Oops. The lisence on OEM operating systems is married to the computer (the Motherborad , CPU and other essential components) not the user and that is specifically why reinstalling on a new motherboard is a breach of the license! CRaven False. A branded OEM is tied to the motherboard technically, not license-wise. Generic OEMs are NOT. All you do is spew FUD. Alias Micrsosoft Licensing Sales Specialist "Johnathan" wrote: KDagnell wrote: Hi there, My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? There are many posts regarding this and many different answers and interpretations. The short answer is you should have no difficulties if done properly. There is nothing improper about repairing a system. I have done this successfully. You will most likely be required to reactivate which is what I did by phone. I was told there is never a problem if you are adding hardware which includes every piece including the CPU. Good Luck. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
CRaven wrote:
Read the oem Licensing agreement - Installing a new motherboard (except under centain warranty conditions) and proceeding to install an already used/activated copy of Windows OEM is a breach of the OEM license! The upgrade of the motherboard is only a hardware upgrade and is not a new pc. It would just require reactivation of the XP. As long as its not on two pcs at the same time, the user can upgrade as many times as they like if it is a standard OEM and not one which is tied to the PC. |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
CRaven wrote:
Read the oem Licensing agreement - Installing a new motherboard (except under centain warranty conditions) and proceeding to install an already used/activated copy of Windows OEM is a breach of the OEM license! Read the excerpt from microsoft OEM system builder website in the first reply to this post! The only way that a processor or motherboard can be changed (without warranty issues) is on a Full Packaged Retail Product! The lisence on OEM operating systems is married to the computer (the Motherborad , CPU and other essential components) not the user and that is specifically why reinstalling on a new motherboard is a breach of the license! CRaven Micrsosoft Licensing Sales Specialist Maybe this should be relayed to MS phone support. In the process of reactivation I was told there would not be a problem and she reactivated that moment. |
#12
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
CRaven wrote:
Read the oem Licensing agreement - Installing a new motherboard (except under centain warranty conditions) and proceeding to install an already used/activated copy of Windows OEM is a breach of the OEM license! Read the excerpt from microsoft OEM system builder website in the first reply to this post! The only way that a processor or motherboard can be changed (without warranty issues) is on a Full Packaged Retail Product! The lisence on OEM operating systems is married to the computer (the Motherborad , CPU and other essential components) not the user and that is specifically why reinstalling on a new motherboard is a breach of the license! The OEMs you are talking about are the ones preinstalled with the machine. Yes they are tied to the machine. This is why I made the distinction in my other post. Two types of OEM - branded OEM which come preinstalled with systems, and generic OEM which can be purchased seperately. |
#13
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
When a motherboard dies, so does the OEM
Windows XP license, unless you replace the motherboard with an exact duplicate. Therefore, the installation of a different model motherboard will require the purchase of a new Windows XP license. -- Carey Frisch Microsoft MVP Windows XP - Shell/User "KDagnell" wrote: Hi there, My motherboard has died and I need to transfer reinstall Windows off my oem disk - a friend tells me that this would breach lisencing and I need a new version! Is this true and is there anything else that I should know regarding this? |
#14
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Branded or generic - Makes no difference - The same 2 license agreements
apply - systems builder + eula: OEM software purchased from a 'computer store' and installed onto a machine CANNOT then be transfered, Refer to OEM System builder agreement and EULA. Just because you may have a version of Windows that Is or appears to be activated does not make it legal! "Beck" wrote: CRaven wrote: Read the oem Licensing agreement - Installing a new motherboard (except under centain warranty conditions) and proceeding to install an already used/activated copy of Windows OEM is a breach of the OEM license! Read the excerpt from microsoft OEM system builder website in the first reply to this post! The only way that a processor or motherboard can be changed (without warranty issues) is on a Full Packaged Retail Product! The lisence on OEM operating systems is married to the computer (the Motherborad , CPU and other essential components) not the user and that is specifically why reinstalling on a new motherboard is a breach of the license! The OEMs you are talking about are the ones preinstalled with the machine. Yes they are tied to the machine. This is why I made the distinction in my other post. Two types of OEM - branded OEM which come preinstalled with systems, and generic OEM which can be purchased seperately. |
#15
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Johnathon;
Just because you may have a version of Windows that Is or appears to be activated does not make it legal. Consider the following ficticious scenario based around what you have said. Jo Upgrades/replaces his motherboard; He reinstalls Windows XP Home on this (effectively) new PC; BillySprat informs Microsoft piracy that you have illegal software on your PC; Jo has a receipt for original software, a hologram CD, manual and COA but when it comes to court - he is asked to provide reciept for motherboard and the judge checks it against the first activation date .. blah blah blah "Johnathan" wrote: CRaven wrote: Read the oem Licensing agreement - Installing a new motherboard (except under centain warranty conditions) and proceeding to install an already used/activated copy of Windows OEM is a breach of the OEM license! Read the excerpt from microsoft OEM system builder website in the first reply to this post! The only way that a processor or motherboard can be changed (without warranty issues) is on a Full Packaged Retail Product! The lisence on OEM operating systems is married to the computer (the Motherborad , CPU and other essential components) not the user and that is specifically why reinstalling on a new motherboard is a breach of the license! CRaven Micrsosoft Licensing Sales Specialist Maybe this should be relayed to MS phone support. In the process of reactivation I was told there would not be a problem and she reactivated that moment. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Steps for Laptop BIOS or Mother Board | Gateway Solo 9500 | Hardware and Windows XP | 1 | February 26th 06 04:41 PM |
Steps for Laptop BIOS or Mother Board | Gateway Solo 9500 | Hardware and Windows XP | 0 | February 26th 06 04:11 PM |
HP 3650 cant install | }BS{Dodger | General XP issues or comments | 3 | September 20th 05 12:51 AM |
New Mother Board | SeaWolf | Windows XP Help and Support | 3 | June 29th 05 09:02 PM |
XP fails to load after replacing mother board | KANLINK | General XP issues or comments | 9 | April 19th 05 11:18 AM |