2 desktop computers in 2 locations. 1 USB bootable drive. Possib

L

lairdwh

I want to have 2 desktop computers, one in the city, one in the country, and
carry one bootable USB drive between them. (And I would backup to a cloned,
serial SATA drive, internal).

I heard that from a HP support person that microsoft is planning to create
this possibility in the future. What do you know about this. (And what
searchable phrases might reveal their plans).
 
M

Mike Hall - MVP

Colin Barnhorst said:
What are asking?


I think that the OP wants to have an installation of Vista on a portable
drive for the purposes of using it on two different systems, thus saving the
cost of a second license, while at the same time enjoying a 'contiguous'
computing experience across both locations..

You have the right to remain silent. Anything you do say will be syndicated
via Google across the internet for all to see and forever more..

--
Mike Hall - MVP
How to construct a good post..
http://dts-l.com/goodpost.htm
How to use the Microsoft Product Support Newsgroups..
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?pr=newswhelp&style=toc
Mike's Window - My Blog..
http://msmvps.com/blogs/mikehall/default.aspx
 
C

Carey Frisch [MVP]

One Windows Vista license for each computer. Period.

--
Carey Frisch
Microsoft MVP
Windows Desktop Experience -
Windows Vista Enthusiast

---------------------------------------------------------------

I want to have 2 desktop computers, one in the city, one in the country, and
carry one bootable USB drive between them. (And I would backup to a cloned,
serial SATA drive, internal).

I heard that from a HP support person that microsoft is planning to create
this possibility in the future. What do you know about this. (And what
searchable phrases might reveal their plans).
 
D

DL

Unless you speak with MS directly anything you hear is only rumour.
The facility you seek is IMO most unlikely
 
R

Rick Rogers

Hi,

I know of no such plans, and it doesn't sound like something that Microsoft
would likely allow in their licensing schemes.

Vista does not support installing to and booting from a USB connected drive,
and the throughput rate would be too slow to be useful even if it did.

--
Best of Luck,

Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP

Windows help - www.rickrogers.org
My thoughts http://rick-mvp.blogspot.com
 
C

Colin Barnhorst

If you are talking about running Vista from a typical usb drive forget it.
Won't happen and MS has stated in the past that the capability to boot from
a usb device will not be supported in Vista. You might be able to install
Vista in a virtual machine that is saved on an exFAT device and that would
be transportable but also would require a separate licence for the copy of
Vista in the virtual machine. I do not have further info on the
availability of exFAT usb devices but you can google on "exfat" to see what
is happening in that regard. None of this involves anything MS is doing.
It is all third party stuff.

The bottom line is that every installed copy of Vista requires its own
license.
 

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