If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
I assembled some parts I had lying around from salvage: an old Asus/AMD M/B and a used laptop drive I had from a portable USB. When I loaded Windows 7 from an OEM Dell DVD it never asked for the COA. I've never had this happen and was wondering how or why? It's been a few months, so it didn't come back and ask for it...Thanks for any thoughts!
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
Bob_Villa wrote:
I assembled some parts I had lying around from salvage: an old Asus/AMD M/B and a used laptop drive I had from a portable USB. When I loaded Windows 7 from an I've never had COA troubles either. The only trouble was trying to install XP Home over an older XP Professional. It doesn't want to do downgrades for some reason. I wound up just putting in a new empty HD. -- On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
On Monday, February 1, 2016 at 11:22:49 AM UTC-6, Ron Hardin wrote:
Bob_Villa wrote: I assembled some parts I had lying around from salvage: an old Asus/AMD M/B and a used laptop drive I had from a portable USB. When I loaded Windows 7 from an I've never had COA troubles either. The only trouble was trying to install XP Home over an older XP Professional. It doesn't want to do downgrades for some reason. I wound up just putting in a new empty HD. -- On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. If I was re-installing a Dell, I never had problems...but when using an OEM disc I've always had it ask for the COA. That's why I was wondering...possibly if you don't connect on the install and say *never* check for updates? |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
Bob_Villa wrote:
If I was re-installing a Dell, I never had problems...but when using an OEM disc I've always had it ask for the COA. That's why I was wondering...possibly if y.. Yeah, I always reinstalled on a Dell. Modern XP reinstalls won't get any updates if they don't have IE8 or better, these days. The site doesn't work with IE6 for instance. I've taken to using wsusoffline 9.2.1 to get them. Thereafter one or two still remain to get from the site. As for automatic XP updates, these days you could leave it on and get the monthly malicious software removal tool run for you, which is the only monthly update. It's not automatic with zone alarm though, which won't let the new MRT.exe call home to finish. -- On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
Bob,
I think that Dell (or maybe Microsoft for all its OEMs?) cobbled up its Win 7 DVD to bypass the request for a product key. Compared to the domestic US Win 7 DVDs, the Dell one includes setup options for all the languages supported by Microsoft, so the DVD content is very large. The big gotcha comes when you go to activate Win 7, because the Microsoft borg ship will see that the motherboard is not a Dell one. For anyone on this group using Windows XP and still on this group ( ;) ), if you create a text file with a .REG extension and the following 3 lines content, and import it into the XP registry, you can continue to get the same updates paid for by all of the banks and point-of-sale terminal XP users: Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\WPA\PosReady] "Installed"=dword:00000001 .... Ben Myers On Monday, February 1, 2016 at 12:07:41 PM UTC-5, Bob_Villa wrote: I assembled some parts I had lying around from salvage: an old Asus/AMD M/B and a used laptop drive I had from a portable USB. When I loaded Windows 7 from an OEM Dell DVD it never asked for the COA. I've never had this happen and was wondering how or why? It's been a few months, so it didn't come back and ask for it...Thanks for any thoughts! |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
On Mon, 1 Feb 2016 13:56:26 -0800 (PST), Ben Myers
wrote: For anyone on this group using Windows XP and still on this group ( ;) ), if you create a text file with a .REG extension and the following 3 lines content, and import it into the XP registry, you can continue to get the same updates paid for by all of the banks and point-of-sale terminal XP users: Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\WPA\PosReady] "Installed"=dword:00000001 ... Ben Myers I saw an (admittedly MS) article which stated that POS-tagging your XP had a significant downside which I didn't commit to memory as it's too scarce and unreliable. But it could just be MS trying to scare people off POS-tagging. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
On Monday, February 1, 2016 at 3:56:28 PM UTC-6, Ben Myers wrote:
Bob, I think that Dell (or maybe Microsoft for all its OEMs?) cobbled up its Win 7 DVD to bypass the request for a product key. Compared to the domestic US Win 7 DVDs, the Dell one includes setup options for all the languages supported by Microsoft, so the DVD content is very large. The big gotcha comes when you go to activate Win 7, because the Microsoft borg ship will see that the motherboard is not a Dell one. For anyone on this group using Windows XP and still on this group ( ;) ), if you create a text file with a .REG extension and the following 3 lines content, and import it into the XP registry, you can continue to get the same updates paid for by all of the banks and point-of-sale terminal XP users: Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\WPA\PosReady] "Installed"=dword:00000001 ... Ben Myers On Monday, February 1, 2016 at 12:07:41 PM UTC-5, Bob_Villa wrote: I assembled some parts I had lying around from salvage: an old Asus/AMD M/B and a used laptop drive I had from a portable USB. When I loaded Windows 7 from an OEM Dell DVD it never asked for the COA. I've never had this happen and was wondering how or why? It's been a few months, so it didn't come back and ask for it...Thanks for any thoughts! Thanks! I will add that I used the same OEM disk on another, newer ASUS/AMD build and it did ask for validation. Kind of weird what sets it of!? |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
pedro wrote:
I saw an (admittedly MS) article which stated that POS-tagging your XP had a significant downside which I didn't commit to memory as it's too scarce and unreliable. But it could just be MS trying to scare people off POS-tagging. The downside is that the fixes are not tested against bare XP. -- On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
On Tue, 02 Feb 2016 08:22:14 -0500, Ron Hardin wrote:
pedro wrote: I saw an (admittedly MS) article which stated that POS-tagging your XP had a significant downside which I didn't commit to memory as it's too scarce and unreliable. But it could just be MS trying to scare people off POS-tagging. The downside is that the fixes are not tested against bare XP. It runs fine. I have been using the "hack" for awhile now, and nothing funky is happening. Just MS trying to get you to upgrade, everything still works fine. I have the XP SP3 disk from Dell, and even have the XP Plus Pack. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
New build from old parts...COA question
On Tuesday, February 2, 2016 at 7:59:44 AM UTC-5, Bob_Villa wrote:
On Monday, February 1, 2016 at 3:56:28 PM UTC-6, Ben Myers wrote: Bob, I think that Dell (or maybe Microsoft for all its OEMs?) cobbled up its Win 7 DVD to bypass the request for a product key. Compared to the domestic US Win 7 DVDs, the Dell one includes setup options for all the languages supported by Microsoft, so the DVD content is very large. The big gotcha comes when you go to activate Win 7, because the Microsoft borg ship will see that the motherboard is not a Dell one. For anyone on this group using Windows XP and still on this group ( ;) ), if you create a text file with a .REG extension and the following 3 lines content, and import it into the XP registry, you can continue to get the same updates paid for by all of the banks and point-of-sale terminal XP users: Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00 [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\WPA\PosReady] "Installed"=dword:00000001 ... Ben Myers On Monday, February 1, 2016 at 12:07:41 PM UTC-5, Bob_Villa wrote: I assembled some parts I had lying around from salvage: an old Asus/AMD M/B and a used laptop drive I had from a portable USB. When I loaded Windows 7 from an OEM Dell DVD it never asked for the COA. I've never had this happen and was wondering how or why? It's been a few months, so it didn't come back and ask for it...Thanks for any thoughts! Thanks! I will add that I used the same OEM disk on another, newer ASUS/AMD build and it did ask for validation. Kind of weird what sets it of!? Two comments: The BIOS signature is what sets off the request for activation after an install of XP from Dell-branded media. F.U.D. Fear, Uncertainty, Doubt. The IBM motto from the last part of the last century, co-opted and used regularly by Microsoft. The POS (not Piece Of S..) registry update works for any XP system. ATMs and Point Of Sale systems used generic Windows XP with some mods to limit what the systems did.. Then Microsoft announced the end of XP support. Mad panic ensued in financial world. Microsoft extracted lucre from banks, financial firms, point-of-sale computer users and Diebold. "Whoops! How we gonna support these companies now that we have their money?" said Stevie Ballmer or one of his underlings. Aha! Light bulbs lit up! The Windows registry hack was the answer. |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Help choosing parts for new build | RBM[_3_] | General | 16 | December 17th 09 01:59 AM |
Plz help check my parts for first PC build.. | Chris | General | 3 | October 26th 04 04:02 PM |
Plz help check my parts for first PC build.. | Chris | Homebuilt PC's | 8 | October 21st 04 07:22 PM |
Plz help check my parts for first PC build | Chris | Overclocking AMD Processors | 2 | October 21st 04 02:50 PM |
I want to build a XY table printer from parts | news.btinternet.com | Printers | 1 | October 11th 04 12:10 AM |