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Hardware upgrades and win7
On 11/26/2010 12:05 PM, xfile wrote:
You are much older than me and this is the best you can do? Perhaps if you have an adult help you, you'll understand my post. You really made my day, my dear Alias. Ignorance and delusion is bliss for you, eh? "Alias" wrote in message ... On 11/26/2010 05:31 AM, xfile wrote: Nothing valuable to be quoted Yet you quoted it anyway. You are incapable of learning and have been proven beyond any reasonable doubt to be a troll, so the reply was not for you. Oh, the little boy hurled an insult. How quaint. There will be no 120-day limitation if no reactivation was incurred. As mentioned, sometimes (meaning under certain conditions) a reactivation could be avoided, and since there was no reactivation, neither will a 120-day requirement incur. You don't know what you're talking about. This is a very simple and basic dependency relationship, and again, please use your brain - Alias. -------- This is for you. The irony! "Alias" wrote in message ... On 11/25/2010 12:23 PM, xfile wrote: The upgrade is going to happen regardless and I guess it will be a suck it and see situation as to what I have to do with mywin7 installation afterwards. I have not contributed anything to your inquiry, but would really appreciate if you could share with us by letting us know the result. Also, you mentioned that you will replace a new motherboard, CPU, and RAM. I don't know if it's possible for you to replace one component at a time (e.g. a new motherboard with the old CPU and RAM, provided they are compatible with the board) instead of replacing all three critical components at once. The reason is that sometimes the activation scheme and Windows operation are based on the accumulated scores/points of critical components changed. Replacing one critical component at a time is more like a system upgrade/repair while replacing all three critical components is more like moving to a new system. So by replacing one at a time, you might avoid a reinstallation or reactivation. In any case, just a thought and good luck!! It won't work but your suggestion would bring the OP a lot of work that is not needed. MS remembers changes for 120 days. Luck has nothing whatsoever to do with it. Still top posting like a newbie I see. So, your advice is wrong and you're posting incorrectly. You're zero for two. Maybe you should file this in one of your phony x-files. -- Alias -- Alias -- Alias |
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