XP Pro (re)activation question
This is an area that I am not entirely familiar with, hence the following question.
I have a service customer some of whose problems can be traced to a bootleg Windows XP Pro install. When I apprised her of this, she "did the right thing" and obtained a legal OEM copy of XP Pro.
What I would like to do is an in-place reinstall to pick up the new, legal key and a new activation -- while losing as little of the current install as possible. Can anybody give me some quick pointers? Are there instructions somewhere for doing this?
As always, any help is appreciated.
TallCool1
Practically a Posting Shark
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I have a service customer some of whose problems can be traced to a bootleg Windows XP Pro install.
If the bootleged copy is the root of the problem then why would you want to keep it ,and just change the key and activation . I don't think what you want to do is possiable ,but it might be !
caperjack
I hate 20 Questions
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caperjack
I hate 20 Questions
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I can't believe the answers I'm seeing here - they're rather bizarre responses to a simple question!
An 'In-place upgrade' should reset the lot. It'll activate as a new installation. All it does is reinstall Windows over the top of the existing installation, using the codes and keys of the new OEM CD. You even have to install updates again afterwards.
Edit: Yes DWard, you'll be able to re-activate. The worst you'd cop would be the need to reactivate by phone, but I doubt that would happen.
Catweazle
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Catweazle
Grandad
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I personally would just do a clean reinstall.
I actually had a bootlegged version XP a friend had given me. I thought, "what the hey-- I'll save some cash", and I installed it. It turned out that it was some kind of pre-release demo or something... You didn't activate it, you only entered in the 25 digit key. That started crashing, causing all sorts of problems. I'd be to worried about a botched install to even let that other stuff give it a chance to screw up my system.
alc6379
Cookie... That's it
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Clean install would be my preferred option too. Anything less is risking exacerbating existing installation problems.
Catweazle
Grandad
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