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krl48
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how do you solve this problem>? i installed home premium all was good
activated just fine. my motherboard went bad. i had hp replace motherboard and when i got pupter fixed i re-intallled vista. it would not accept the original product key. i called microsoft and they gave me a new product key it activated just fine. now 2 weeks later i get this error message. that this is not a original copy of windows. areo is now shut down. i call microsoft get put on hold and get disconnected. now i have to wait for 2 days to call them back. i cant put in original key aswont accept and the key they gave me it now says its activated but when i enter it for support purposes it says its a invalid key! what do i do? "Conor" wrote: > To: Microsoft Partners > > From: Allison Watson > > Subject: Important activation changes to Windows Vista > > Date: April 27, 2007 > > As a valued partner and trusted advisor to our customers, I wanted to > re-iterate Microsoft?s commitment to helping protect consumers and > software resellers from the risks associated with pirated software. > Millions of PCs that ship each year end up with non-genuine Windows® > software, which puts you at a competitive disadvantage, and your > customers at risk of a sub-optimal experience. > > The significant anti-piracy technologies built into Windows Vista? > software are designed to make the widespread pirating of Windows Vista > more difficult. Now, all customers who deploy Windows Vista must > successfully activate their product using a genuine product key. If a > non-genuine product key is used in activation, customers will > experience reduced functionality and lose certain features, such as > Microsoft Aero and ReadyBoost. > > To avoid potential business disruptions and maintain the highest level > of satisfaction with Windows Vista deployments, the most important > activation changes for you to be aware of and to inform your customers > about are: > > 1. Activation: In the first 30 days of use, all new installations of > Windows Vista must be activated by the OEM, through Windows Vista > volume licensing technologies, or by the end customer. If Windows Vista > is not activated in the first 30 days, the system will operate in a > reduced functionality mode. > 2. Validation: In order to protect users from being victimized by > counterfeit software, and to protect Microsoft?s intellectual property, > Windows Vista includes ongoing validation. Through validation, if non- > genuine Windows Vista is detected (including non-genuine product keys, > cracked or tampered code) the system enters a 30-day grace period. > During this time Windows Aero and ReadyBoost features are disabled, and > Windows Defender and Windows Update will have limited capabilities > (optional updates will not be available through Windows Update, and > Windows Defender will only remove critical and severe threats). In > addition, during this grace period, a message will appear repeatedly, > encouraging the user to take the steps necessary to activate with a > genuine product key in order to regain the full value of Windows Vista > and to prevent the system from going into a reduced functionality mode. > 3. Reduced Functionality: After the repeated prompts above, and if > Windows Vista is not activated in the 30-day grace period, the system > will operate in a reduced functionality state until a genuine product > key is used for activation. In this reduced state, the user will have > access to their files and applications, and access to the Internet. > However, the desktop will be simplified with only a browser (no Start > Menu or Task Bar) and Windows Vista usage will be limited to one hour > sessions, at which time the user is forced to log off. Additionally, > users may boot the system in Safe Mode in order to access or back-up > personal data and applications. > > I encourage you to communicate early with customers about the > activation changes. For customers that experience reduced > functionality, you can help them resolve this by providing them > information about how to activate their Windows Vista properly or > enable them to purchase a genuine copy. > > Learn more to help you discuss this with your customers. > > If you serve customers in multiple ways, you may receive a similar > communication from the Microsoft OEM team about these new anti-piracy > changes. Together, we are working to deliver a great Windows Vista > experience for you and for our customers. > > Thank you for your business, > > Allison Watson > Corporate Vice President > Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group > -- > Conor > > Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright > until you hear them speak......... > |
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Chad Harris
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Hi Krl148--
I don't see in your message whether you know for sure if your VHP is genuine. What's the source of your VHP--since you installed it you got a DVD from somewhere I assume unless there is now downloadable Vista from a MSFT site--I heard there would be but have not kept up with that? Either you're getting the error message in error or you're getting it because your VHP isn't genuine. Normally when you called MSFT they would have verified your DVD Part Number before generating the new PK for you. Bottom Line is if it's genuine-call 'em right back and let them make this well. I don't understand the two day wait to call 'em back--I've been able to get a PK gen 24X7 from their support if I needed it. Give that a shot if you read this before normal hours. Obviously whatever they gave you to use to activate is not working if it's genuine VHP on the box. Good luck, CH I'd like to extend a prodigious shout out to former Asst. Sec of State Randall Tobias under (lol or maybe over) Condi Rice. My Tobias does the Bushy camp proud by being a quintissential Bushy Rep. His CV included CEO at Eli Lily Pharmaceutical headquatered in straight laced Indianapolis--home of TA'd Rep Pence and the setting for TV's "Close to Home" which is abundant with TAs and he was CEO of AT&T International. His job until he resigned late Friday to avoid the news dump was to be Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's point man in an ambitious effort to overhaul how the U.S. government manages foreign aid and his official title was Director of U.S. Foreign Assistance and U.S. Agency for International Development Administrator and Assistant Sec of State. A DC Madam indicted federally for rackateering is usuing an unusual defense of posting her clients on her web site putting more of her list on the web as time passes. She employed around 120 ladies who were "college educated" and has a 10,000 15,000 client list of some of the beltway's finest citizens and family values pushers Bushey style from 2002-2006. For about $300, she promised 90 minutes of what she has described as a discreet “legal high-end erotic fantasy service.” But the discreet part is over, after federal authorities charged her with operating a prostitution ring. The hypocrisy is prototypical Bushey. Mr. Tobias, who was the director of foreign assistance and the administrator of the Agency for International Development, ran agencies that required foreign recipients of AIDS assistance to explicitly condemn prostitution, a policy that drew protests from some nations and relief organizations. The medical problem with this, and I hate to drag science into the world of the Busheys who hate and don't understand science but prefer witchcraft over medicine, is that a population who needs HIV education and sometimes treatment are those that Mr. Tobias would have exclueded espousing what the world now knows is his personal moral hypocrisy shared with the Family Value Busheys. Condi Rice is paid the big bucks to administer these programs, and this only reveals her consummate stupidity and cruelty trying to restrict HIV care to those who need it the most. April 29, 2007 Woman in Escort Case Plans to Name Names in Defense http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/29/us...gewanted=print Rice Deputy Quits After Query Over Escort Service Randall Tobias Oversaw U.S. Foreign Aid Programs http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn...702497_pf.html Frank Rich ALL THE PRESIDENT'S PRESS Sunday, May 29, 2007 NY TIMES SOMEHOW it’s hard to imagine David Halberstam yukking it up with Alberto Gonzales, Paul Wolfowitz and two discarded “American Idol” contestants at the annual White House Correspondents’ Association dinner. Before there was a Woodward and Bernstein, there was Halberstam, still not yet 30 in the early 1960s, calling those in power to account for lying about our “progress” in Vietnam. He did so even though J.F.K. told the publisher of The Times, “I wish like hell that you’d get Halberstam out of there.” He did so despite public ridicule from the dean of that era’s Georgetown punditocracy, the now forgotten columnist (and Vietnam War cheerleader) Joseph Alsop. It was Alsop’s spirit, not Halberstam’s, that could be seen in C-Span’s live broadcast of the correspondents’ dinner last Saturday, two days before Halberstam’s death in a car crash in California. This fete is a crystallization of the press’s failures in the post-9/11 era: it illustrates how easily a propaganda-driven White House can enlist the Washington news media in its shows. Such is literally the case at the annual dinner, where journalists serve as a supporting cast, but it has been figuratively true year-round. The press has enabled stunts from the manufactured threat of imminent “mushroom clouds” to “Saving Private Lynch” to “Mission Accomplished,” whose fourth anniversary arrives on Tuesday. For all the recrimination, self-flagellation and reforms that followed these journalistic failures, it’s far from clear that the entire profession yet understands why it has lost the public’s faith. That state of denial was center stage at the correspondents’ dinner last year, when the invited entertainer, Stephen Colbert, “fell flat,” as The Washington Post summed up the local consensus. To the astonishment of those in attendance, a funny thing happened outside the Beltway the morning after: the video of Mr. Colbert’s performance became a national sensation. (Last week it was still No. 2 among audiobook downloads on iTunes.) Washington wisdom had it that Mr. Colbert bombed because he was rude to the president. His real sin was to be rude to the capital press corps, whom he caricatured as stenographers. Though most of the Washington audience failed to find the joke funny, Americans elsewhere, having paid a heavy price for the press’s failure to challenge White House propaganda about Iraq, laughed until it hurt. You’d think that l’affaire Colbert would have led to a little circumspection, but last Saturday’s dinner was another humiliation. And not just because this year’s entertainer, an apolitical nightclub has-been (Rich Little), was a ludicrously tone-deaf flop. More appalling — and symptomatic of the larger sycophancy — was the press’s insidious role in President Bush’s star turn at the event. It’s the practice on these occasions that the president do his own comic shtick, but this year Mr. Bush made a grand show of abstaining, saying that the killings at Virginia Tech precluded his being a “funny guy.” Any civilian watching on TV could formulate the question left hanging by this pronouncement: Why did the killings in Iraq not preclude his being a “funny guy” at other press banquets we’ve watched on C-Span? At the equivalent Radio and Television Correspondents’ Association gala three years ago, the president contributed an elaborate (and tasteless) comic sketch about his failed search for Saddam’s W.M.D. But the revelers in the ballroom last Saturday could not raise that discrepancy and challenge Mr. Bush’s hypocrisy; they could only clap. And so they served as captive dress extras in a propaganda stunt, lending their credibility to the president’s sanctimonious exploitation of the Virginia Tech tragedy for his own political self-aggrandizement on national television. Meanwhile the war was kept as tightly under wraps as the troops’ coffins. By coincidence, this year’s dinner occurred just before a Congressional hearing filled in some new blanks in the still incomplete story of a more egregious White House propaganda extravaganza: the Pat Tillman hoax. As it turns out, the correspondents’ dinner played an embarrassing cameo role in it, too. What the hearing underscored was the likelihood that the White House also knew very early on what the Army knew and covered up: the football star’s supposed death in battle in Afghanistan, vividly described in a Pentagon press release awarding him a Silver Star, was a complete fabrication, told to the world (and Tillman’s parents) even though top officers already suspected he had died by friendly fire. The White House apparently decided to join the Pentagon in maintaining that lie so that it could be milked for P.R. purposes on two television shows, the correspondents’ dinner on May 1, 2004, and a memorial service for Tillman two days later. The timeline of events in the week or so leading up to that dinner is startling. Tillman was killed on April 22, 2004. By the next day top officers knew he had not been killed by enemy fire. On April 29, a top special operations commander sent a memo to John Abizaid, among other generals, suggesting that the White House be warned off making specific public claims about how Tillman died. Simultaneously, according to an e-mail that surfaced last week, a White House speechwriter contacted the Pentagon to gather information about Tillman for use at the correspondents’ dinner. When President Bush spoke at the dinner at week’s end, he followed his jokes with a eulogy about Tillman’s sacrifice. But he kept the circumstances of Tillman’s death vague, no doubt because the White House did indeed get the message that the Pentagon’s press release about Tillman’s losing his life in battle was fiction. Yet it would be four more weeks before Pat Tillman’s own family was let in on the truth. To see why the administration wanted to keep the myth going, just look at other events happening in the week before that correspondents’ dinner. On April 28, 2004, CBS broadcast the first photographs from Abu Ghraib; on April 29 a poll on The Times’s front page found the president’s approval rating on the war was plummeting; on April 30 Ted Koppel challenged the administration’s efforts to keep the war dead hidden by reading the names of the fallen on “Nightline.” Tillman could be useful to help drown out all this bad news, and to an extent he was. The Washington press corps that applauded the president at the correspondents’ dinner is the same press corps that was slow to recognize the importance of Abu Ghraib that weekend and, as documented by a new study, “When the Press Fails” (University of Chicago Press), even slower to label the crimes as torture. In his PBS report last week about the journalism breakdown before the war, Bill Moyers said that “the press has yet to come to terms with its role in enabling the Bush administration to go to war on false pretenses.” That’s not universally true; a number of news organizations have owned up to their disasters and tried to learn from them. Yet old habits die hard: for too long the full weight of the scandal in the Gonzales Justice Department eluded some of the Washington media pack, just as Abu Ghraib and the C.I.A. leak case did. After last weekend’s correspondents’ dinner, The Times decided to end its participation in such events. But even were the dinner to vanish altogether, it remains but a yearly televised snapshot of the overall syndrome. The current White House, weakened as it is, can still establish story lines as fake as “Mission Accomplished” and get a free pass. To pick just one overarching example: much of the press still takes it as a given that Iraq has a functioning government that might meet political benchmarks (oil law, de-Baathification reform, etc., etc.) that would facilitate an American withdrawal. In reality, the Maliki “government” can’t meet any benchmarks, even if they were enforced, because that government exists only as a fictional White House talking point. As Gen. Barry McCaffrey said last week, this government doesn’t fully control a single province. Its Parliament, now approaching a scheduled summer recess, has passed no major legislation in months. Iraq’s sole recent democratic achievement is to ban the release of civilian casualty figures, lest they challenge White House happy talk about “progress” in Iraq. It’s our country’s bitter fortune that while David Halberstam is gone, too many Joe Alsops still hold sway. Take the current dean of the Washington press corps, David Broder, who is leading the charge in ridiculing Harry Reid for saying the obvious — that “this war is lost” (as it is militarily, unless we stay in perpetuity and draft many more troops). In February, Mr. Broder handed down another gem of Beltway conventional wisdom, suggesting that “at the very moment the House of Representatives is repudiating his policy in Iraq, President Bush is poised for a political comeback.” Some may recall that Stephen Colbert offered the same prediction in his monologue at the correspondents’ dinner a year ago. “I don’t believe this is a low point in this presidency,” he said. “I believe it is just a lull before a comeback.” But the fake pundit, unlike the real one, recognized that this was a joke. "krl48" <> wrote in message news:37007A0B-A669-43F2-BBCE-... > how do you solve this problem>? i installed home premium all was good > activated just fine. my motherboard went bad. i had hp replace motherboard > and when i got pupter fixed i re-intallled vista. it would not accept the > original product key. i called microsoft and they gave me a new product > key > it activated just fine. now 2 weeks later i get this error message. that > this is not a original copy of windows. areo is now shut down. i call > microsoft get put on hold and get disconnected. now i have to wait for 2 > days > to call them back. i cant put in original key aswont accept and the key > they > gave me it now says its activated but when i enter it for support purposes > it > says its a invalid key! what do i do? > > "Conor" wrote: > >> To: Microsoft Partners >> >> From: Allison Watson >> >> Subject: Important activation changes to Windows Vista >> >> Date: April 27, 2007 >> >> As a valued partner and trusted advisor to our customers, I wanted to >> re-iterate Microsoft?s commitment to helping protect consumers and >> software resellers from the risks associated with pirated software. >> Millions of PCs that ship each year end up with non-genuine Windows® >> software, which puts you at a competitive disadvantage, and your >> customers at risk of a sub-optimal experience. >> >> The significant anti-piracy technologies built into Windows Vista? >> software are designed to make the widespread pirating of Windows Vista >> more difficult. Now, all customers who deploy Windows Vista must >> successfully activate their product using a genuine product key. If a >> non-genuine product key is used in activation, customers will >> experience reduced functionality and lose certain features, such as >> Microsoft Aero and ReadyBoost. >> >> To avoid potential business disruptions and maintain the highest level >> of satisfaction with Windows Vista deployments, the most important >> activation changes for you to be aware of and to inform your customers >> about are: >> >> 1. Activation: In the first 30 days of use, all new installations of >> Windows Vista must be activated by the OEM, through Windows Vista >> volume licensing technologies, or by the end customer. If Windows Vista >> is not activated in the first 30 days, the system will operate in a >> reduced functionality mode. >> 2. Validation: In order to protect users from being victimized by >> counterfeit software, and to protect Microsoft?s intellectual property, >> Windows Vista includes ongoing validation. Through validation, if non- >> genuine Windows Vista is detected (including non-genuine product keys, >> cracked or tampered code) the system enters a 30-day grace period. >> During this time Windows Aero and ReadyBoost features are disabled, and >> Windows Defender and Windows Update will have limited capabilities >> (optional updates will not be available through Windows Update, and >> Windows Defender will only remove critical and severe threats). In >> addition, during this grace period, a message will appear repeatedly, >> encouraging the user to take the steps necessary to activate with a >> genuine product key in order to regain the full value of Windows Vista >> and to prevent the system from going into a reduced functionality mode. >> 3. Reduced Functionality: After the repeated prompts above, and if >> Windows Vista is not activated in the 30-day grace period, the system >> will operate in a reduced functionality state until a genuine product >> key is used for activation. In this reduced state, the user will have >> access to their files and applications, and access to the Internet. >> However, the desktop will be simplified with only a browser (no Start >> Menu or Task Bar) and Windows Vista usage will be limited to one hour >> sessions, at which time the user is forced to log off. Additionally, >> users may boot the system in Safe Mode in order to access or back-up >> personal data and applications. >> >> I encourage you to communicate early with customers about the >> activation changes. For customers that experience reduced >> functionality, you can help them resolve this by providing them >> information about how to activate their Windows Vista properly or >> enable them to purchase a genuine copy. >> >> Learn more to help you discuss this with your customers. >> >> If you serve customers in multiple ways, you may receive a similar >> communication from the Microsoft OEM team about these new anti-piracy >> changes. Together, we are working to deliver a great Windows Vista >> experience for you and for our customers. >> >> Thank you for your business, >> >> Allison Watson >> Corporate Vice President >> Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group >> -- >> Conor >> >> Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright >> until you hear them speak......... >> |
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Selee
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Conor,
Evidently Microsoft partner HP was never made aware of the information you presented. I purchased a new Compac Presario with Vista Home Basic installed. When I received the computer the paper work with it said, start up and enjoy the experience. This weekend, I started getting messages that my copy of Vista was not a legal installation and I should either operate with a reduced functioned program, enter another product key or contact HP for assistance. I contacted HP for assistance. Here is their support answer! You will need to reload the operating system! Huh? I buy a new computer with the new operating system installed and they want me to reinstall? I wasn't buying that and after a while I found a Microsoft support number which I called and finally got the system validated. HP offered no backup disks for the operating system. The Microsoft Genuine tag was helpfully put on the bottom of the computer where, unless you are a contortionist, you can't read and type at the same time. Plus HP offered no setup information that you would have to validate the installation yourself. A copy of the information you posted would have saved me all the trouble! "Conor" <> wrote in message news:.. . > To: Microsoft Partners > > From: Allison Watson > > Subject: Important activation changes to Windows Vista > > Date: April 27, 2007 > > As a valued partner and trusted advisor to our customers, I wanted to > re-iterate Microsoft?s commitment to helping protect consumers and > software resellers from the risks associated with pirated software. > Millions of PCs that ship each year end up with non-genuine Windows® > software, which puts you at a competitive disadvantage, and your > customers at risk of a sub-optimal experience. > > The significant anti-piracy technologies built into Windows Vista? > software are designed to make the widespread pirating of Windows Vista > more difficult. Now, all customers who deploy Windows Vista must > successfully activate their product using a genuine product key. If a > non-genuine product key is used in activation, customers will > experience reduced functionality and lose certain features, such as > Microsoft Aero and ReadyBoost. > > To avoid potential business disruptions and maintain the highest level > of satisfaction with Windows Vista deployments, the most important > activation changes for you to be aware of and to inform your customers > about are: > > 1. Activation: In the first 30 days of use, all new installations of > Windows Vista must be activated by the OEM, through Windows Vista > volume licensing technologies, or by the end customer. If Windows Vista > is not activated in the first 30 days, the system will operate in a > reduced functionality mode. > 2. Validation: In order to protect users from being victimized by > counterfeit software, and to protect Microsoft?s intellectual property, > Windows Vista includes ongoing validation. Through validation, if non- > genuine Windows Vista is detected (including non-genuine product keys, > cracked or tampered code) the system enters a 30-day grace period. > During this time Windows Aero and ReadyBoost features are disabled, and > Windows Defender and Windows Update will have limited capabilities > (optional updates will not be available through Windows Update, and > Windows Defender will only remove critical and severe threats). In > addition, during this grace period, a message will appear repeatedly, > encouraging the user to take the steps necessary to activate with a > genuine product key in order to regain the full value of Windows Vista > and to prevent the system from going into a reduced functionality mode. > 3. Reduced Functionality: After the repeated prompts above, and if > Windows Vista is not activated in the 30-day grace period, the system > will operate in a reduced functionality state until a genuine product > key is used for activation. In this reduced state, the user will have > access to their files and applications, and access to the Internet. > However, the desktop will be simplified with only a browser (no Start > Menu or Task Bar) and Windows Vista usage will be limited to one hour > sessions, at which time the user is forced to log off. Additionally, > users may boot the system in Safe Mode in order to access or back-up > personal data and applications. > > I encourage you to communicate early with customers about the > activation changes. For customers that experience reduced > functionality, you can help them resolve this by providing them > information about how to activate their Windows Vista properly or > enable them to purchase a genuine copy. > > Learn more to help you discuss this with your customers. > > If you serve customers in multiple ways, you may receive a similar > communication from the Microsoft OEM team about these new anti-piracy > changes. Together, we are working to deliver a great Windows Vista > experience for you and for our customers. > > Thank you for your business, > > Allison Watson > Corporate Vice President > Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group > -- > Conor > > Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright > until you hear them speak......... |
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krl48
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i got a run around from microsoft for 4 days then they tell me i have to
get new product key from hp. i get ahold of hp and they tell me that microsoft has to give it to me so now im screwed i got the cds from the hp express upgrade program all was fine until i had to get new motherboard installed in which a hp tec replaced so i screwed right neither microsoft or hp will help "Selee" wrote: > Conor, > > Evidently Microsoft partner HP was never made aware of the information you > presented. I purchased a new Compac Presario with Vista Home Basic > installed. When I received the computer the paper work with it said, start > up and enjoy the experience. This weekend, I started getting messages that > my copy of Vista was not a legal installation and I should either operate > with a reduced functioned program, enter another product key or contact HP > for assistance. > > I contacted HP for assistance. Here is their support answer! You will need > to reload the operating system! Huh? > I buy a new computer with the new operating system installed and they want > me to reinstall? I wasn't buying that and after a while I found a Microsoft > support number which I called and finally got the system validated. > > HP offered no backup disks for the operating system. The Microsoft Genuine > tag was helpfully put on the bottom of the computer where, unless you are a > contortionist, you can't read and type at the same time. Plus HP offered no > setup information that you would have to validate the installation yourself. > > A copy of the information you posted would have saved me all the trouble! > > "Conor" <> wrote in message > news:.. . > > To: Microsoft Partners > > > > From: Allison Watson > > > > Subject: Important activation changes to Windows Vista > > > > Date: April 27, 2007 > > > > As a valued partner and trusted advisor to our customers, I wanted to > > re-iterate Microsoft?s commitment to helping protect consumers and > > software resellers from the risks associated with pirated software. > > Millions of PCs that ship each year end up with non-genuine Windows® > > software, which puts you at a competitive disadvantage, and your > > customers at risk of a sub-optimal experience. > > > > The significant anti-piracy technologies built into Windows Vista? > > software are designed to make the widespread pirating of Windows Vista > > more difficult. Now, all customers who deploy Windows Vista must > > successfully activate their product using a genuine product key. If a > > non-genuine product key is used in activation, customers will > > experience reduced functionality and lose certain features, such as > > Microsoft Aero and ReadyBoost. > > > > To avoid potential business disruptions and maintain the highest level > > of satisfaction with Windows Vista deployments, the most important > > activation changes for you to be aware of and to inform your customers > > about are: > > > > 1. Activation: In the first 30 days of use, all new installations of > > Windows Vista must be activated by the OEM, through Windows Vista > > volume licensing technologies, or by the end customer. If Windows Vista > > is not activated in the first 30 days, the system will operate in a > > reduced functionality mode. > > 2. Validation: In order to protect users from being victimized by > > counterfeit software, and to protect Microsoft?s intellectual property, > > Windows Vista includes ongoing validation. Through validation, if non- > > genuine Windows Vista is detected (including non-genuine product keys, > > cracked or tampered code) the system enters a 30-day grace period. > > During this time Windows Aero and ReadyBoost features are disabled, and > > Windows Defender and Windows Update will have limited capabilities > > (optional updates will not be available through Windows Update, and > > Windows Defender will only remove critical and severe threats). In > > addition, during this grace period, a message will appear repeatedly, > > encouraging the user to take the steps necessary to activate with a > > genuine product key in order to regain the full value of Windows Vista > > and to prevent the system from going into a reduced functionality mode. > > 3. Reduced Functionality: After the repeated prompts above, and if > > Windows Vista is not activated in the 30-day grace period, the system > > will operate in a reduced functionality state until a genuine product > > key is used for activation. In this reduced state, the user will have > > access to their files and applications, and access to the Internet. > > However, the desktop will be simplified with only a browser (no Start > > Menu or Task Bar) and Windows Vista usage will be limited to one hour > > sessions, at which time the user is forced to log off. Additionally, > > users may boot the system in Safe Mode in order to access or back-up > > personal data and applications. > > > > I encourage you to communicate early with customers about the > > activation changes. For customers that experience reduced > > functionality, you can help them resolve this by providing them > > information about how to activate their Windows Vista properly or > > enable them to purchase a genuine copy. > > > > Learn more to help you discuss this with your customers. > > > > If you serve customers in multiple ways, you may receive a similar > > communication from the Microsoft OEM team about these new anti-piracy > > changes. Together, we are working to deliver a great Windows Vista > > experience for you and for our customers. > > > > Thank you for your business, > > > > Allison Watson > > Corporate Vice President > > Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group > > -- > > Conor > > > > Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright > > until you hear them speak......... > > > |
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Chad Harris
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That's not right. Whomever supplied the original CD either OEM or MSFt (not
clear here but I believe HP) is responsible for giving you a key that works. You are getting a collossal runaround and I'd go to whoever sold you that OS and demand a valid key. I also don't understand why a pre-loaded OS isn't running. I do understand that MSFT forces companies not to provide you an OS DVD with the panopoly of recovery tools they brag about and that none of their setup engineers has moved a muscle to stand up to this abuse of customers nor has Newsgroup Liason Jill Zoeller from MSFT moved a muscle to correct that problem. CH "krl48" <> wrote in message news:9486F48F-7E20-4839-BB8E-... >i got a run around from microsoft for 4 days then they tell me i have to > get new product key from hp. i get ahold of hp and they tell me that > microsoft has to give it to me so now im screwed i got the cds from the hp > express upgrade program all was fine until i had to get new motherboard > installed in which a hp tec replaced so i screwed right neither microsoft > or > hp will help > > "Selee" wrote: > >> Conor, >> >> Evidently Microsoft partner HP was never made aware of the information >> you >> presented. I purchased a new Compac Presario with Vista Home Basic >> installed. When I received the computer the paper work with it said, >> start >> up and enjoy the experience. This weekend, I started getting messages >> that >> my copy of Vista was not a legal installation and I should either >> operate >> with a reduced functioned program, enter another product key or contact >> HP >> for assistance. >> >> I contacted HP for assistance. Here is their support answer! You will >> need >> to reload the operating system! Huh? >> I buy a new computer with the new operating system installed and they >> want >> me to reinstall? I wasn't buying that and after a while I found a >> Microsoft >> support number which I called and finally got the system validated. >> >> HP offered no backup disks for the operating system. The Microsoft >> Genuine >> tag was helpfully put on the bottom of the computer where, unless you are >> a >> contortionist, you can't read and type at the same time. Plus HP offered >> no >> setup information that you would have to validate the installation >> yourself. >> >> A copy of the information you posted would have saved me all the trouble! >> >> "Conor" <> wrote in message >> news:.. . >> > To: Microsoft Partners >> > >> > From: Allison Watson >> > >> > Subject: Important activation changes to Windows Vista >> > >> > Date: April 27, 2007 >> > >> > As a valued partner and trusted advisor to our customers, I wanted to >> > re-iterate Microsoft?s commitment to helping protect consumers and >> > software resellers from the risks associated with pirated software. >> > Millions of PCs that ship each year end up with non-genuine Windows® >> > software, which puts you at a competitive disadvantage, and your >> > customers at risk of a sub-optimal experience. >> > >> > The significant anti-piracy technologies built into Windows Vista? >> > software are designed to make the widespread pirating of Windows Vista >> > more difficult. Now, all customers who deploy Windows Vista must >> > successfully activate their product using a genuine product key. If a >> > non-genuine product key is used in activation, customers will >> > experience reduced functionality and lose certain features, such as >> > Microsoft Aero and ReadyBoost. >> > >> > To avoid potential business disruptions and maintain the highest level >> > of satisfaction with Windows Vista deployments, the most important >> > activation changes for you to be aware of and to inform your customers >> > about are: >> > >> > 1. Activation: In the first 30 days of use, all new installations of >> > Windows Vista must be activated by the OEM, through Windows Vista >> > volume licensing technologies, or by the end customer. If Windows Vista >> > is not activated in the first 30 days, the system will operate in a >> > reduced functionality mode. >> > 2. Validation: In order to protect users from being victimized by >> > counterfeit software, and to protect Microsoft?s intellectual property, >> > Windows Vista includes ongoing validation. Through validation, if non- >> > genuine Windows Vista is detected (including non-genuine product keys, >> > cracked or tampered code) the system enters a 30-day grace period. >> > During this time Windows Aero and ReadyBoost features are disabled, and >> > Windows Defender and Windows Update will have limited capabilities >> > (optional updates will not be available through Windows Update, and >> > Windows Defender will only remove critical and severe threats). In >> > addition, during this grace period, a message will appear repeatedly, >> > encouraging the user to take the steps necessary to activate with a >> > genuine product key in order to regain the full value of Windows Vista >> > and to prevent the system from going into a reduced functionality mode. >> > 3. Reduced Functionality: After the repeated prompts above, and if >> > Windows Vista is not activated in the 30-day grace period, the system >> > will operate in a reduced functionality state until a genuine product >> > key is used for activation. In this reduced state, the user will have >> > access to their files and applications, and access to the Internet. >> > However, the desktop will be simplified with only a browser (no Start >> > Menu or Task Bar) and Windows Vista usage will be limited to one hour >> > sessions, at which time the user is forced to log off. Additionally, >> > users may boot the system in Safe Mode in order to access or back-up >> > personal data and applications. >> > >> > I encourage you to communicate early with customers about the >> > activation changes. For customers that experience reduced >> > functionality, you can help them resolve this by providing them >> > information about how to activate their Windows Vista properly or >> > enable them to purchase a genuine copy. >> > >> > Learn more to help you discuss this with your customers. >> > >> > If you serve customers in multiple ways, you may receive a similar >> > communication from the Microsoft OEM team about these new anti-piracy >> > changes. Together, we are working to deliver a great Windows Vista >> > experience for you and for our customers. >> > >> > Thank you for your business, >> > >> > Allison Watson >> > Corporate Vice President >> > Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group >> > -- >> > Conor >> > >> > Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright >> > until you hear them speak......... >> >> >> |
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krl48
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i tried to use hp recovery cd's hp sent me followed there directions . it
reads cd then het error and vista reboost and loads. hp said they cant give new key because they buy them from microsoft and microsoft says the oem has to give it to me so guess what im screwed i even talked to sups. from both co. "Chad Harris" wrote: > That's not right. Whomever supplied the original CD either OEM or MSFt (not > clear here but I believe HP) is responsible for giving you a key that works. > You are getting a collossal runaround and I'd go to whoever sold you that OS > and demand a valid key. I also don't understand why a pre-loaded OS isn't > running. I do understand that MSFT forces companies not to provide you an > OS DVD with the panopoly of recovery tools they brag about and that none of > their setup engineers has moved a muscle to stand up to this abuse of > customers nor has Newsgroup Liason Jill Zoeller from MSFT moved a muscle to > correct that problem. > > CH > > "krl48" <> wrote in message > news:9486F48F-7E20-4839-BB8E-... > >i got a run around from microsoft for 4 days then they tell me i have to > > get new product key from hp. i get ahold of hp and they tell me that > > microsoft has to give it to me so now im screwed i got the cds from the hp > > express upgrade program all was fine until i had to get new motherboard > > installed in which a hp tec replaced so i screwed right neither microsoft > > or > > hp will help > > > > "Selee" wrote: > > > >> Conor, > >> > >> Evidently Microsoft partner HP was never made aware of the information > >> you > >> presented. I purchased a new Compac Presario with Vista Home Basic > >> installed. When I received the computer the paper work with it said, > >> start > >> up and enjoy the experience. This weekend, I started getting messages > >> that > >> my copy of Vista was not a legal installation and I should either > >> operate > >> with a reduced functioned program, enter another product key or contact > >> HP > >> for assistance. > >> > >> I contacted HP for assistance. Here is their support answer! You will > >> need > >> to reload the operating system! Huh? > >> I buy a new computer with the new operating system installed and they > >> want > >> me to reinstall? I wasn't buying that and after a while I found a > >> Microsoft > >> support number which I called and finally got the system validated. > >> > >> HP offered no backup disks for the operating system. The Microsoft > >> Genuine > >> tag was helpfully put on the bottom of the computer where, unless you are > >> a > >> contortionist, you can't read and type at the same time. Plus HP offered > >> no > >> setup information that you would have to validate the installation > >> yourself. > >> > >> A copy of the information you posted would have saved me all the trouble! > >> > >> "Conor" <> wrote in message > >> news:.. . > >> > To: Microsoft Partners > >> > > >> > From: Allison Watson > >> > > >> > Subject: Important activation changes to Windows Vista > >> > > >> > Date: April 27, 2007 > >> > > >> > As a valued partner and trusted advisor to our customers, I wanted to > >> > re-iterate Microsoft?s commitment to helping protect consumers and > >> > software resellers from the risks associated with pirated software. > >> > Millions of PCs that ship each year end up with non-genuine Windows® > >> > software, which puts you at a competitive disadvantage, and your > >> > customers at risk of a sub-optimal experience. > >> > > >> > The significant anti-piracy technologies built into Windows Vista? > >> > software are designed to make the widespread pirating of Windows Vista > >> > more difficult. Now, all customers who deploy Windows Vista must > >> > successfully activate their product using a genuine product key. If a > >> > non-genuine product key is used in activation, customers will > >> > experience reduced functionality and lose certain features, such as > >> > Microsoft Aero and ReadyBoost. > >> > > >> > To avoid potential business disruptions and maintain the highest level > >> > of satisfaction with Windows Vista deployments, the most important > >> > activation changes for you to be aware of and to inform your customers > >> > about are: > >> > > >> > 1. Activation: In the first 30 days of use, all new installations of > >> > Windows Vista must be activated by the OEM, through Windows Vista > >> > volume licensing technologies, or by the end customer. If Windows Vista > >> > is not activated in the first 30 days, the system will operate in a > >> > reduced functionality mode. > >> > 2. Validation: In order to protect users from being victimized by > >> > counterfeit software, and to protect Microsoft?s intellectual property, > >> > Windows Vista includes ongoing validation. Through validation, if non- > >> > genuine Windows Vista is detected (including non-genuine product keys, > >> > cracked or tampered code) the system enters a 30-day grace period. > >> > During this time Windows Aero and ReadyBoost features are disabled, and > >> > Windows Defender and Windows Update will have limited capabilities > >> > (optional updates will not be available through Windows Update, and > >> > Windows Defender will only remove critical and severe threats). In > >> > addition, during this grace period, a message will appear repeatedly, > >> > encouraging the user to take the steps necessary to activate with a > >> > genuine product key in order to regain the full value of Windows Vista > >> > and to prevent the system from going into a reduced functionality mode. > >> > 3. Reduced Functionality: After the repeated prompts above, and if > >> > Windows Vista is not activated in the 30-day grace period, the system > >> > will operate in a reduced functionality state until a genuine product > >> > key is used for activation. In this reduced state, the user will have > >> > access to their files and applications, and access to the Internet. > >> > However, the desktop will be simplified with only a browser (no Start > >> > Menu or Task Bar) and Windows Vista usage will be limited to one hour > >> > sessions, at which time the user is forced to log off. Additionally, > >> > users may boot the system in Safe Mode in order to access or back-up > >> > personal data and applications. > >> > > >> > I encourage you to communicate early with customers about the > >> > activation changes. For customers that experience reduced > >> > functionality, you can help them resolve this by providing them > >> > information about how to activate their Windows Vista properly or > >> > enable them to purchase a genuine copy. > >> > > >> > Learn more to help you discuss this with your customers. > >> > > >> > If you serve customers in multiple ways, you may receive a similar > >> > communication from the Microsoft OEM team about these new anti-piracy > >> > changes. Together, we are working to deliver a great Windows Vista > >> > experience for you and for our customers. > >> > > >> > Thank you for your business, > >> > > >> > Allison Watson > >> > Corporate Vice President > >> > Microsoft Worldwide Partner Group > >> > -- > >> > Conor > >> > > >> > Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright > >> > until you hear them speak......... > >> > >> > >> > > |
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