Thing is, this one was for free... as was the XP i'm on right now... under this it seems: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/academic/default.aspxUniversity student deal ($30 for download, $13 extra for a shipped disc) found at http://www.win741.com
Looking it over, it seems like a normal retail version, not OEM.
Not for the PC my brother has (but we d/l both).Also, keep in mind that with both the OEM and Retail the key works on 32 bit and 64 bit. You get to choose which version you actually want to install. Protip: It's 64.
My Win7 disc was shipped yesterday but I really, really want to start installing it tonight. Does anyone know if there is a way to change the key once you install it from a less-than-legal site? I mean I have obtained the software legally already so I don't feel like I'd be doing anything wrong by installing it before the disc actually gets here.Thing is, this one was for free... as was the XP i'm on right now... under this it seems: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/academic/default.aspxUniversity student deal ($30 for download, $13 extra for a shipped disc) found at http://www.win741.com
Looking it over, it seems like a normal retail version, not OEM.
Not for the PC my brother has (but we d/l both).Also, keep in mind that with both the OEM and Retail the key works on 32 bit and 64 bit. You get to choose which version you actually want to install. Protip: It's 64.
This is a case of YMMV. OEM copies of XP were supposed to be this way, but when my old PC died I used my OEM copy from it to set up dual-booting on my current computer, and I didn't have any problems installing at all. It had been a couple years since I changed hardware at all, but moving to new Mobo, CPU, video card, hard drive, etc. should have triggered it, but didn't.-OEM version can only be installed on one computer. Ever. Try to install it on another computer (whether the first one is still working or not) and it will fail the activation (unless you whine enough on the phone). Even if it is the same computer but a different motherboard, it will still fail. The activation code is tied to that specific hardware and will never work again unless that hardware is the same as the first activation. Yes, MSFT does account for upgrades (new video cards, etc) but you can't change too much too fast or again, you fail.
I thought that was an upgrade version? In that case the EULA probably says it's for install on a singe PC and isn't eligible for transfer to different hardware.University student deal ($30 for download, $13 extra for a shipped disc) found at http://www.win741.com
Looking it over, it seems like a normal retail version, not OEM.
XP was very lenient OEM wise. Since manufacturers shipped out thousands of identical machines, the majority of them shipped registered with a *default* key instead of registering the key that came with the machine. This meant that the OEM keys could theoretically be used to install on another machine with no issue, as the hardware was never associated with that key.This is a case of YMMV. OEM copies of XP were supposed to be this way, but when my old PC died I used my OEM copy from it to set up dual-booting on my current computer, and I didn't have any problems installing at all. It had been a couple years since I changed hardware at all, but moving to new Mobo, CPU, video card, hard drive, etc. should have triggered it, but didn't.
Yeah i saw, my brother installed it on his old PC (took out the net cable) and the mouse icon didn't lag behind like it did in XP (and even Linux).Just so you know? Windows 7 is awesome.
I wonder if that even available over here...For what it's worth, my old XP OEM key didn't work for some reason when installing anew (I had it running on 2 PC's at the time), so I rang up MS, got an automated system where I entered my old key and got myself a new one without even talking to anyone.
I would assume something similar is set up for Vista/7.