nhughesatl wrote:
> You'll need a volume license for that..
Since they are all
> independant right now you need to have each individual set of
> numbers tied to each machine. Otherwise yoru audit group will
> frown on that. After you get that you can ghost one base image and
> ghostcast it to all the other machines with no issue.
Jeff Grossman wrote:
> One more quick question. If I was doing this with either Windows
> 2000 or Windows 98, would I have been able to do what I wanted and
> after I installed the ghosted image, run a bat file to change the
> product key back to the original for that machine? I imagine
> because Windows XP requires product activation, and the product key
> is assigned to that one particular machine, it is not possible.
You could do it with Windows XP that way as well - sort of.
(Win9X/ME/2K just didn't have activation - but changing the installation key
before activation isn't that hard.)
Not as easily - perhaps not even automated - but maybe - I have never tried.
But if you used something like:
http://unattended.sourceforge.net/ (network)
or
http://unattended.msfn.org/ (cd/dvd)
with whatever media you wanted, then you could likely do what you are
desiring.. Using the CVS method from the first place might allow you to
enter different keys for the same OEM media - and thus automate the entire
thing - and it is a lot more flexible (albeit slower) than an imaging
process.
You would be better off with a volume license - of that there is no doubt.
=)
--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html