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Vista Activation |
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#1 |
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I registered my purchased and legal copy of Vista Home Premium in
February/March 2007 and all was well until yesterday when Windows informed that I must activate Vista within 3 days or else. On trying to do this it informed that the key was already in use by another computer!!! I cannot affoid for the PC to 'shutdown' in 2 days and don't understand what has happened. Please can anyone offer some advice. Chris |
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#2 |
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Brink,
Many thanks, I have just sucessfully reactivated. Do you know why this suddenley happened or is it an annual occurance? Best regards, Chris "Brink" wrote: > > Chris;639433 Wrote: > > I registered my purchased and legal copy of Vista Home Premium in > > February/March 2007 and all was well until yesterday when Windows > > informed > > that I must activate Vista within 3 days or else. On trying to do this > > it > > informed that the key was already in use by another computer!!! > > > > I cannot affoid for the PC to 'shutdown' in 2 days and don't understand > > what > > has happened. Please can anyone offer some advice. > > > > Chris > > Hi Chris, > > You will just need to do a phone activation to get Vista activated > again. This will show you how. > > http://www.vistax64.com/tutorials/8...ista-phone.html > > Shawn > > > -- > Brink > > *There are no dumb questions, just the people that do not ask them.* > '*Vista x64 Forums*' > (http://www.vistax64.com/index.php?referrerid=2980) > *Please post feedback to help others.* > |
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#3 |
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On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 12:25:03 -0800, Chris@Swift
<ChrisSwift@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: >Brink, > >Many thanks, I have just sucessfully reactivated. Do you know why this >suddenley happened or is it an annual occurance? Answer a few questions, please: 1) Did you recently visit Windows Update? Perhaps one of the updates caused Windows Activation to de-register your activation [by mistake]. 2) Did you recently make any [major] hardware changes (i.e., within the last week), such as network cards, cpu/motherboard replacements, hard drive replacements, "clean" reinstallations of Vista (by wiping the drive, which will effectively remove the activation record on your computer), or changes in Boot disk size or Volume Label, any of which could cause your installation of Vista to lose its "activated" status? Either of these may cause your activation record on the Activation Server to get out of sync with the activation record on your home computer, resulting in what happened. This almost always requires a phone re-activation from a live Microsoft activation tech. In answer to your last question: This is NOT an annual occurance. There are no such occurances with a Windows Home user license. -- Donald L McDaniel How can so many otherwise very intelligent people screw up something so simple so badly? If you stick a computer keyboard in front of most people, they'll suddenly drop 30 points off their IQs. Much like placing a "Pork Barrel" bill in front of a politician: He'll forget all about "cooperation" the minute he counts the zeroes before the decimal point. |
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#4 |
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Donald,
I have made no changes to the hardware since building the PC last year when Vista was originally activated. With respect to updates, I've set Vista to automatically install so that may be the cause as you suggest. Chris "Donald L McDaniel" wrote: > On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 12:25:03 -0800, Chris@Swift > <ChrisSwift@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: > > >Brink, > > > >Many thanks, I have just sucessfully reactivated. Do you know why this > >suddenley happened or is it an annual occurance? > > Answer a few questions, please: > > 1) Did you recently visit Windows Update? Perhaps one of the updates > caused Windows Activation to de-register your activation [by mistake]. > 2) Did you recently make any [major] hardware changes (i.e., within > the last week), such as network cards, cpu/motherboard replacements, > hard drive replacements, "clean" reinstallations of Vista (by wiping > the drive, which will effectively remove the activation record on your > computer), or changes in Boot disk size or Volume Label, any of which > could cause your installation of Vista to lose its "activated" status? > > Either of these may cause your activation record on the Activation > Server to get out of sync with the activation record on your home > computer, resulting in what happened. This almost always requires a > phone re-activation from a live Microsoft activation tech. > > In answer to your last question: > This is NOT an annual occurance. There are no such occurances with a > Windows Home user license. > > > -- > Donald L McDaniel > > How can so many otherwise very intelligent people screw up > something so simple so badly? If you stick a computer > keyboard in front of most people, they'll suddenly drop > 30 points off their IQs. Much like placing a "Pork Barrel" > bill in front of a politician: He'll forget all about > "cooperation" the minute he counts the zeroes before the > decimal point. > |
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#5 |
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Guest
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On Sat, 8 Mar 2008 14:24:02 -0800, Chris@Swift
<ChrisSwift@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote: >Donald, > >I have made no changes to the hardware since building the PC last year when >Vista was originally activated. With respect to updates, I've set Vista to >automatically install so that may be the cause as you suggest. > >Chris From what I know, Chris, this appears to be a known problem with Microsoft Windows Product Activation itself. While Microsoft claims that the latest updates to WPA have fixed it so that there will be fewer such de-activations, they are still reported by enough other users on a regular basis to be troubling to consumers. Either a lot of people are trying to steal Vista, or something is wrong with WPA. I prefer to believe that most folks are honest, and Microsoft's software is at fault. Anyway, hopefully sooner rather than later, WPA will be intelligent enough to be able to tell the difference between a hacked copy of Vista and a legitimate one, and be intelligent enough to make such misidentifications a thing of the past. Personally, I would prefer a form of hardwired licensing, such as a few "bad" sectors on the installation media, over the software-based licensing we have today. Or a combination of the two. But this WGA we have today is simply unpalatable. It probably costs as much in money and other resources for Microsoft to maintain the WPA system that they would lose in sales if it was not used. -- Donald L McDaniel How can so many otherwise very intelligent people screw up something so simple so badly? If you stick a computer keyboard in front of most people, they'll suddenly drop 30 points off their IQs. Much like placing a "Pork Barrel" bill in front of a politician: He'll forget all about "cooperation" the minute he counts the zeroes before the decimal point. |
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