- OEM idenity
- Posted by Broksonic on January 5th, 2008
I recently purchased at an auction a box of CDs. In that box was a XP Pro
genuine disc with the original label. It all checked out via the Microsoft
web site as an authentic product. However there is no OEM name on the disc.
While trying to use the disc i found there were errors on the install process.
My question is HOW do i find out the OEM name so i can get a replacement for
my damaged disc?
- Posted by Shenan Stanley on January 5th, 2008
Broksonic wrote:
If it is *not* a generic OEM disc - it is pretty much worthless. A branded
OEM was likely used to install on a branded system already. If it is a
generic OEM CD - any copy of any generic OEM CD will work fine.
--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
- Posted by Broksonic on January 5th, 2008
its a generic OEM (Microsoft gold colored CD) but i would like to find OEM
name to get a replacement if i can. Planning on selling a system and include
disc/reg number with it.
"Shenan Stanley" wrote:
- Posted by Alias on January 5th, 2008
Broksonic wrote:
You're not going to find one. Find a friend who has the same generic OEM
version and make a copy. You can use the product key with the copy.
Alias
- Posted by David Webb on January 5th, 2008
"Broksonic" <Broksonic@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:894A1DCE-C812-4338-8BE5-E5CB330CAF67@microsoft.com...
- Posted by David Webb on January 5th, 2008
Soory, but I think I sent a blank message before this one (coffee is still
brewing).
This How-To covers instructions for both Retail and OEM versions:
How to replace lost, broken, or missing Microsoft software or hardware
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?kbid=326246
Good luck!
"Broksonic" <Broksonic@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message
news:894A1DCE-C812-4338-8BE5-E5CB330CAF67@microsoft.com...
- Posted by Bruce Chambers on January 5th, 2008
Broksonic wrote:
Generic OEM CDs are no distributed through specific manufacturers, but
rather are available to the general public. The only entity that could
replace the defective CD would be the vendor who sold it to you. And
there, your probably out of luck, as no doubt the auction was conducted
on an "as is" basis.
--
Bruce Chambers
Help us help you:
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killed a great many philosophers.
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- Posted by Ken Blake, MVP on January 5th, 2008
On Sat, 5 Jan 2008 03:11:01 -0800, Broksonic
<Broksonic@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
If it's generic, there is no specific OEM. That's what the word
"generic" means. All generic CDs are the same, regardless of who sold
them.
There is probably no way to get a replacement.
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
- Posted by Ken Blake, MVP on January 5th, 2008
On Sat, 05 Jan 2008 09:37:18 -0700, "Ken Blake, MVP"
<kblake@this.is.an.invalid.domain> wrote:
And by the way, assuming that this CD/license has already been used on
another computer (and it probably has, based on the way you describe
it), it can not legally be used again on another computer. The biggest
disadvantage of an OEM version is that its license ties it permanently
to the first computer it's installed on. It can never legally be moved
to another computer, sold, or given away, except with that original
computer.
--
Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP Windows - Shell/User
Please Reply to the Newsgroup
- Posted by Alias on January 5th, 2008
Ken Blake, MVP wrote:
You mean you can't move it to another computer and be within the
guidelines of the EULA. Technically, it can be moved if it's been longer
than 120 days since the last activation or if you lie to the phone
activator. That, and the fact that MS never defines what one computer is
vs. another, you can upgrade your computer's hardware to the point where
it's a new computer and stay within the OEM EULA guidelines.
I am speaking of a generic OEM, not a branded OEM.
Alias
- Posted by Plato on January 7th, 2008
=?Utf-8?B?QnJva3Nvbmlj?= wrote:
You are out of luck.
--
http://www.bootdisk.com/
- Posted by Plato on January 7th, 2008
Ken Blake, MVP wrote:
Even so, and yes, one can dupe an official XP CD, it is no guarantee
that the serial has already been used.
--
http://www.bootdisk.com/

