OEM cheap? Last time I checked eBuyer it's £110.00 for OEM 7 Pro, my student Ultimate cost £50.00, and the only retail they have is 8.1 & NCR Win 7 for embedded systems - what ever that is?
Trying to obtain OS / hardware freedom while legitimately purchasing and using Windows 7 is not a 'user friendly' experience for I.T. when the company won't pay for MS volume / open licencing!
The boss sometimes will buy a cheap laptop with Windows Home on it, I then have to buy another copy of Windows Pro so it will connect to the domain and have to contend with the stupid BIOS key that regardless of the version of the disk you have it re-installs the version based on the BIOS key, so I spend hours creating boot USB and editing a PID.txt file and changing BIOS settings, just to install Windows that we've technically paid for twice.
Want freedom to reinstall? Buy the full retail version instead.
I have student Windows Ultimate at home and still spent hours on the stupid MS activation hotline just to be cut off while trying to activate it because it won't accept my license key on re-install. Go round the houses get passed to real MS people, not call centre guy, they remotely connect to the machine and run special activation software, and I specifically checked with them giving them my key code, that this is a student full version of Ultimate that can be moved from PC to PC, which they confirmed while activating.
Only to have my Phoenix blade SSD die on me weeks later, so I had to replace it with a Samsung XP941 M.2 SSD, and took 5 phone calls, keep being cut off halfway through call, to have to ring back and go through the same thing with call centre guy before you get passed to real MS support. MS licencing drives me insane at home or at work!
So sorry if I seem a little unhappy, it just really frustrates me, I've bought the software legitimately, even sometimes technically twice, please just install and let me get a life!
If the motherboard is upgraded or replaced for reasons other than a defect, then a new computer has been created.
I said 'fried' mobo = defective. I am not talking upgrade for new technology or improvements, I'm talking purely damaged, broken, defective replacement. No <sigh> required, my statement still stands. If I have a mobo that dies and the model is no longer available I will replace it with what ever form factor / CPU socket, RAM type etc is compatible with the rest of the components to get the machine up and running again. Which I was under the impression from OEM and the snippet you posted, and direct discussion with MS activation support, this is still the case and as it should be, so therefore please can I have the code required to install the software I have purchased a licence to use should I need to.
Isn't this whole discussion a bit moot when you think that Windows 10 will be free and you can do a fresh install if a hard drive dies.
Really, I was under the impression that the free upgrade from 7/8/8.1 was only valid for a year, has this changed? If a fresh install can always be performed with no licence requirements, this and this alone is a reason to move to Windows 10. I didn't realise Windows 10 was moving to a no-charge OS.
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