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Grain wrote:Unless all the talk claiming that burning/editting video is severely crippled w/ Vista is incorrect, I'll only be going to it on a new machine (probably at least 6 months off, and even then may run XP on it first), keeping XP on at least one rig. Only things that interest me so far about Vista is the "claim" that it doesn't require frequent re-installs to cure the bogging that can plague XP/98etc, and of course DirectX 10 .
CowboySlim wrote:The issue is that one can't reinstall.
So if your hard drive dies, you have to buy another copy.
CowboySlim wrote:Do we know that a failed hard drive does not constitute a significant hardware change?
Ian wrote:CowboySlim wrote:Do we know that a failed hard drive does not constitute a significant hardware change?
It has to be a number of changes at once. I think the magic number with Vista is 7. So unless you're changing a bunch of your hardware, you're okay.
Ian wrote:CowboySlim wrote:Do we know that a failed hard drive does not constitute a significant hardware change?
It has to be a number of changes at once. I think the magic number with Vista is 7. So unless you're changing a bunch of your hardware, you're okay.
dolphinius_rex wrote:If that includes ODD's then you and I are both quite screwed... I might add/change 3-4 ODD's in one week sometimes If I happen to add a video card, HDD and processor at the same time, it could look very bad
JamieW wrote:Of those people who voted "No," how many of you are not using XP?
Ian wrote:dolphinius_rex wrote:If that includes ODD's then you and I are both quite screwed... I might add/change 3-4 ODD's in one week sometimes If I happen to add a video card, HDD and processor at the same time, it could look very bad
I don't believe ODD's are one of the things it looks at. It doesn't matter anyway as it has to be X number of changes at once. Not over a week or so.
Activation Hardware Tolerance
In much the same way the Windows XP Windows Product Activation functions, a MAK activation key must be renewed if significant hardware changes occur. As hardware changes occur, Windows Vista tracks each change, using a weighted score to accumulate changes made. If a cumulative score reaches 25, the computer is considered out of tolerance and must be activated with a MAK. Table 3 lists hardware components and their relative weight.
Table 3. Activation Hardware Tolerances
Component class name Weight
CD-ROM/CD-RW/DVD-ROM 1
Display adapter 1
RAM amount range (for example, 0–512 MB, 512 MB–1 GB, 2–4 GB) 1
Audio adapter 2
Network adapter Media Access Control (MAC) address 2
Small computer system interface (SCSI) adapter 2
Integrated device electronics (IDE) adapter 3
Processor 3
BIOS identification (0 always matches) 9
Physical operating system hard drive device serial number 11
Ian wrote:Here's the best info I've found on hardware changes and activation. Surprisingly, it comes from my university.
http://kb.wisc.edu/m/page.php?id=5294Activation Hardware Tolerance
In much the same way the Windows XP Windows Product Activation functions, a MAK activation key must be renewed if significant hardware changes occur. As hardware changes occur, Windows Vista tracks each change, using a weighted score to accumulate changes made. If a cumulative score reaches 25, the computer is considered out of tolerance and must be activated with a MAK. Table 3 lists hardware components and their relative weight.
Table 3. Activation Hardware Tolerances
Component class name Weight
CD-ROM/CD-RW/DVD-ROM 1
Display adapter 1
RAM amount range (for example, 0–512 MB, 512 MB–1 GB, 2–4 GB) 1
Audio adapter 2
Network adapter Media Access Control (MAC) address 2
Small computer system interface (SCSI) adapter 2
Integrated device electronics (IDE) adapter 3
Processor 3
BIOS identification (0 always matches) 9
Physical operating system hard drive device serial number 11
This applies to MAK activations but I can't imagine that the retail version of Vista is any different.
smartin4 wrote:Question, what exactly is a MAK? Is it a new activation code? Is it free, or is M$ looking to charge you for it?
Hypothetical situation, you have a pc at home and you took out a 2nd mortgage to pay for M$'s new overhyped, bloated OS. You are running for about 2 weeks and your pc takes a surge that fries the CPU, RAM, mobo (with integrated NIC), & hd. Is M$ going to tell you that you need to pay for a new license or activation code because you have exceeded their "quota" for hardware points?
stix wrote:What are the corporate and academic sectors doing, upgrading or waiting?
Ian wrote:
If you're buying a copy of Vista with your computer, it is activated by the OEM. From what I can gather, you can install these bundled versions as many times as you want on that computer.
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