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Hi guys
If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Thanks -- Carl G |
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#2
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"Carl G" cgerving@ecenetDOTcom wrote in message
... Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Thanks Simply No. OEM versions are tied to the first PC they are installed to. They are not transferable to another PC at any later date. If you wish to be able to transfer the license to another PC you must purchase the full Retail version. -- Regards, Mike -- Mike Brannigan [Microsoft] This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights Please note I cannot respond to e-mailed questions, please use these newsgroups "Carl G" cgerving@ecenetDOTcom wrote in message ... Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Thanks -- Carl G |
#3
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"Carl G" cgerving@ecenetDOTcom wrote in message =
... Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from = one pc=20 to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she = wants=20 to build a new pc. So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home = built=20 pc now,wants a bigger one. Thanks =20 --=20 It will be technically possible to install your OEM version of Windows = XP on your daughters next computer, but it is not permitted by the EULA. = It would be like continuing to use an unlicensed version of Winzip = beyond the trial period or using the free edition of Avast Antivirus in = a corporate environment; possible, but not permissible. However, the story is entirely different with your Upgrade version, = which is transferrable to the new machine. carl |
#4
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Carl G wrote:
Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. No. OEM versions must be sold with a non-peripheral piece of hardware (normally a motherboard or hard drive, if not an entire PC, although Microsoft has greatly relaxed the hardware criteria for WinXP) and are _permanently_ bound to the first PC on which they are installed. An OEM license, once installed, is not legally transferable to another computer under any circumstances. This is the main reason some people avoid OEM versions; if the PC dies or is otherwise disposed of (even stolen), you cannot legitimately re-use your OEM license on a new PC. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. Then you best option would be to use the WinXP Upgrade license. Keep in mind, though, that in order to later use the Upgrade license on a new PC, you'll need to have an older, qualifying OS license for the new PC, and you'll need to remove the Upgrade license from the first PC on which you install it. (If there's a few hours' "over-lap" while you're transferring files/data from the old computer to the new one, it shouldn't be a big deal. Your intent is correct.) So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Will you also be transferring any of the hardware components (something more significant than a case screw or power cord) from the old PC to the new PC? If so, your actions could possibly be construed as a hardware upgrade, rather than as a "new computer." Additionally, you'll have entered a grey area in the OEM EULA. According to the EULA, an OEM license may not be transferred from one distinct PC to another PC. However, this most emphatically does not prohibit one from repairing or upgrading the PC on which an OEM license is installed. Now, some people believe that the motherboard is the key component that defines the "original computer," but the OEM EULA does not make any such distinction. Others have said that one could successfully argue that it's the PC's case that is the deciding component, as that is where one is instructed to affix the OEM CoA label w/Product Key. Again, the EULA does not specifically define any single component as the computer. Microsoft has, to date, been very careful _not_ publicly to define when an incrementally upgraded computer ceases to be the original computer. The closest I've ever seen a Microsoft employee come to this definition (in a public forum) is to tell the person making the inquiry to consult the PC's manufacturer. As the OEM license's support is solely the responsibility of said manufacturer, they should determine what sort of hardware changes to allow before the warranty and support agreements are voided. To paraphrase: An incrementally upgraded computer ceases to be the original computer, as pertains to the OEM EULA, only when the *OEM* says it's a different computer. If you've built the system yourself, and used a generic OEM CD, then _you_ are the "OEM," and _you_ get to decide when you'll no longer support your product." -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on having both at once. - RAH |
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Mike Brannigan [MSFT] wrote:
"Carl G" cgerving@ecenetDOTcom wrote in message ... Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Thanks Simply No. Nothing is simple with post-sale shrink-wrapped licenses. OEM versions are tied to the first PC they are installed to. They are not transferable to another PC at any later date. That would be the CLAIM I mentioned in my post. If you wish to be able to transfer the license to another PC you must purchase the full Retail version. MUST! LOL! Reality suggests that your "MUST" is total nonsense. -- Regards, Mike -- Mike Brannigan [Microsoft] This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights In other words, he is talking for himself, and takes no responsibility for his accuracy of his words, or their results. -- Peace! Kurt Self-anointed Moderator microscum.pubic.windowsexp.gonorrhea http://microscum.com "Trustworthy Computing" is only another example of an Oxymoron! "Produkt-Aktivierung macht frei" |
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Vagabond Software wrote:
"Carl G" cgerving@ecenetDOTcom wrote in message ... Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Thanks -- It will be technically possible to install your OEM version of Windows XP on your daughters next computer, but it is not permitted by the EULA. It would be like continuing to use an unlicensed version of Winzip beyond the trial period or using the free edition of Avast Antivirus in a corporate environment; possible, but not permissible. However, the story is entirely different with your Upgrade version, which is transferrable to the new machine. As long as you have the qualifying media. Many Major OEM restore disks cannot be used as qualifying media. -- Peace! Kurt Self-anointed Moderator microscum.pubic.windowsexp.gonorrhea http://microscum.com "Trustworthy Computing" is only another example of an Oxymoron! "Produkt-Aktivierung macht frei" |
#7
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![]() "Carl G" cgerving@ecenetDOTcom wrote in message ... Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Thanks I might be wrong but I believe the official view is no. Once an OEM copy has been activated on one PC you can't reactivate it on another. However I believe you get 30 days to activate an installation so you could always install it for 30 days and then move it to another PC. Just don't activate it by accident when if prompts you. |
#8
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Hi Bruce
We are planning on buying the XP home CD from office max.it will not be oem like compaq or HP. Just by reading i kinda got the idea there were 2 different kinds of OEM, one from oem builders and one from microsoft (office max). Is this corect. And yes i would be the builder. Thanks again -- Carl G "Bruce Chambers" wrote in message ... Carl G wrote: Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. No. OEM versions must be sold with a non-peripheral piece of hardware (normally a motherboard or hard drive, if not an entire PC, although Microsoft has greatly relaxed the hardware criteria for WinXP) and are _permanently_ bound to the first PC on which they are installed. An OEM license, once installed, is not legally transferable to another computer under any circumstances. This is the main reason some people avoid OEM versions; if the PC dies or is otherwise disposed of (even stolen), you cannot legitimately re-use your OEM license on a new PC. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. Then you best option would be to use the WinXP Upgrade license. Keep in mind, though, that in order to later use the Upgrade license on a new PC, you'll need to have an older, qualifying OS license for the new PC, and you'll need to remove the Upgrade license from the first PC on which you install it. (If there's a few hours' "over-lap" while you're transferring files/data from the old computer to the new one, it shouldn't be a big deal. Your intent is correct.) So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Will you also be transferring any of the hardware components (something more significant than a case screw or power cord) from the old PC to the new PC? If so, your actions could possibly be construed as a hardware upgrade, rather than as a "new computer." Additionally, you'll have entered a grey area in the OEM EULA. According to the EULA, an OEM license may not be transferred from one distinct PC to another PC. However, this most emphatically does not prohibit one from repairing or upgrading the PC on which an OEM license is installed. Now, some people believe that the motherboard is the key component that defines the "original computer," but the OEM EULA does not make any such distinction. Others have said that one could successfully argue that it's the PC's case that is the deciding component, as that is where one is instructed to affix the OEM CoA label w/Product Key. Again, the EULA does not specifically define any single component as the computer. Microsoft has, to date, been very careful _not_ publicly to define when an incrementally upgraded computer ceases to be the original computer. The closest I've ever seen a Microsoft employee come to this definition (in a public forum) is to tell the person making the inquiry to consult the PC's manufacturer. As the OEM license's support is solely the responsibility of said manufacturer, they should determine what sort of hardware changes to allow before the warranty and support agreements are voided. To paraphrase: An incrementally upgraded computer ceases to be the original computer, as pertains to the OEM EULA, only when the *OEM* says it's a different computer. If you've built the system yourself, and used a generic OEM CD, then _you_ are the "OEM," and _you_ get to decide when you'll no longer support your product." -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on having both at once. - RAH |
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"CWatters" wrote in message
... I might be wrong but I believe the official view is no. Once an OEM copy has been activated on one PC you can't reactivate it on another. However I believe you get 30 days to activate an installation so you could always install it for 30 days and then move it to another PC. Just don't activate it by accident when if prompts you. Activation is not related the use of the license in this case. Once you install the OEM software to the PC it may not be moved to another irrespective of if you activated it or not. -- Regards, Mike -- Mike Brannigan [Microsoft] This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights Please note I cannot respond to e-mailed questions, please use these newsgroups "CWatters" wrote in message ... "Carl G" cgerving@ecenetDOTcom wrote in message ... Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Thanks I might be wrong but I believe the official view is no. Once an OEM copy has been activated on one PC you can't reactivate it on another. However I believe you get 30 days to activate an installation so you could always install it for 30 days and then move it to another PC. Just don't activate it by accident when if prompts you. |
#10
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![]() "Mike Brannigan [MSFT]" wrote in message ... "CWatters" wrote in message ... I might be wrong but I believe the official view is no. Once an OEM copy has been activated on one PC you can't reactivate it on another. However I believe you get 30 days to activate an installation so you could always install it for 30 days and then move it to another PC. Just don't activate it by accident when if prompts you. Activation is not related the use of the license in this case. Once you install the OEM software to the PC it may not be moved to another irrespective of if you activated it or not. -- Regards, Mike All you have to do is keep the hard drive or case or RAM and you're upgrading a computer and reinstalling windows on the updated computer. If you buy all new parts or a completely new computer, you are not supposed to reninstall it but you "may" and "can" do it without problems if you wait 120 days after you first activated it or, if like another poster said, you don't activate it on your yet to be upgraded computer. MS says you shouldn't do it, although that has never been decided in a court of law so, yes, if MS took you to court, you *may* be found in breach of the EULA contract, a civil offense without serious consequences. If you live in a civilized country, the judge will throw the breach of contract suit out as frivolous as has been proven in Spain and other countries time and time again. -- Alias Use the Reply to Sender feature of your news reader program to email me. Utiliza Responder al Remitente para mandarme un mail. |
#11
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Alias wrote:
"Mike Brannigan [MSFT]" wrote in message ... "CWatters" wrote in message ... I might be wrong but I believe the official view is no. Once an OEM copy has been activated on one PC you can't reactivate it on another. However I believe you get 30 days to activate an installation so you could always install it for 30 days and then move it to another PC. Just don't activate it by accident when if prompts you. Activation is not related the use of the license in this case. Once you install the OEM software to the PC it may not be moved to another irrespective of if you activated it or not. -- Regards, Mike All you have to do is keep the hard drive or case or RAM and you're upgrading a computer and reinstalling windows on the updated computer. If you buy all new parts or a completely new computer, you are not supposed to reninstall it but you "may" and "can" do it without problems if you wait 120 days after you first activated it or, if like another poster said, you don't activate it on your yet to be upgraded computer. MS says you shouldn't do it, although that has never been decided in a court of law so, yes, if MS took you to court, you *may* be found in breach of the EULA contract, a civil offense without serious consequences. If you live in a civilized country, the judge will throw the breach of contract suit out as frivolous as has been proven in Spain and other countries time and time again. Since MS doesn't define what a new different computer is as opposed to an upgraded one, just move a case screw from the old computer to the new one. -- Peace! Kurt Self-anointed Moderator microscum.pubic.windowsexp.gonorrhea http://microscum.com "Trustworthy Computing" is only another example of an Oxymoron! "Produkt-Aktivierung macht frei" |
#12
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Mike Brannigan [MSFT] wrote:
"CWatters" wrote in message ... I might be wrong but I believe the official view is no. Once an OEM copy has been activated on one PC you can't reactivate it on another. However I believe you get 30 days to activate an installation so you could always install it for 30 days and then move it to another PC. Just don't activate it by accident when if prompts you. Activation is not related the use of the license in this case. Once you install the OEM software to the PC it may not be moved to another irrespective of if you activated it or not. LOL! That's not in the EULA. Time to get MS Legal rewriting the EULA again. You guys added Activation, so no installation is truely completed into a totally workable OS, until that install is ACTIVATED. -- Peace! Kurt Self-anointed Moderator microscum.pubic.windowsexp.gonorrhea http://microscum.com "Trustworthy Computing" is only another example of an Oxymoron! "Produkt-Aktivierung macht frei" |
#13
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Carl G wrote:
Hi Bruce We are planning on buying the XP home CD from office max.it will not be oem like compaq or HP. Just by reading i kinda got the idea there were 2 different kinds of OEM, one from oem builders and one from microsoft (office max). Is this corect. And yes i would be the builder. There are multiple types of OEM installation CDs. Some computer manufacturers provide only a "Recovery" CD that has a hard drive "image" on it. These CDs cannot be used to perform a normal installation, but rather completely replace whatever's on the hard drive with an exact copy of the way the hard drive "looked" when it left the factory. These "Recovery" disks won't work on any computer hardware configuration other than the one for which they're specifically designed. Other computer manufacturers provide a branded OEM CD that can be used in pretty much the same manner as a retail or generic OEM CD, but are "locked" to the BIOS of the computer with which it was purchased. When installed on the computer with which it was purchased, this license does not require activation. Often, but not always, this type of CD will not perform an installation on any other make/model computer. Sometimes, though, this type of OEM CD will install on a different computer, but will then fail Activation, citing an invalid Product Key. On rare occasions, one can circumvent this obstacle by activating via telephone and then lying to the telephone representative. Another type of OEM CD is that distributed by Microsoft to authorized systems builders. These CDs are almost as fully functional as the retail CDs. They can perform new or repair installations, but not upgrades. The only thing preventing their being transferred from one computer to another is the integrity of the license holder. -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on having both at once. - RAH |
#14
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one can circumvent this obstacle by activating via telephone
and then lying to the telephone representative. you just finished telling the op how to get around activating an oem version on a different computer and on an MS sponsered newsgroup , then you preach integrity ? shame on you , how dare you preach integrity . if you had any idea how dissappointed i am right now . |
#15
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Hi again
We wnt to build a total new pc , but keep her old hard drives (2) ,that way we don't have to worry about cleaning them out or distroying them.She does a daycare buisness and keeps all her records on the pc,she has 2 hard drives now, one with windows on and the other for storage,+ the my documents folder. Thanks -- Carl G "CWatters" wrote in message ... "Carl G" cgerving@ecenetDOTcom wrote in message ... Hi guys If i buy a microsoft OEM version of XP Home ,can i transfer it from one pc to another like i would be able to do with a upgrade copy. I want to install xp on my daughters pc now but in the near future she wants to build a new pc. So can we transfer the oem copy to the new home built pc.She has home built pc now,wants a bigger one. Thanks I might be wrong but I believe the official view is no. Once an OEM copy has been activated on one PC you can't reactivate it on another. However I believe you get 30 days to activate an installation so you could always install it for 30 days and then move it to another PC. Just don't activate it by accident when if prompts you. |
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