D
DL
Guest
If you buy a retail version of winxp, from a valid supplier, you can install
/ activate as often as necessary.
If an oem version, then its locked to the original hardware.
If you change a motherboard you would need to run a repair installation of
winxp and install the new drivers
Winxp is coming to the end of its support lifecycle
Personally I couldn't see any need or purpose to dual boot win2k and winxp,
unless you have some hardware only supported by win2k. All the software I
had under win2k ran fine on winxp
wrote in message
news:cm0cr5pihijuoq0gonr6tvri7f7g4t4n4v@4ax.com...
> I have been running Win2000Pro for years. I really dont want to
> upgrade, but I am seeing more and more things that do not run on 2K
> anymore. I do not have the hardware to run Win7, and wont go near
> Vista for any reason. I guess XP is my only choice. I have no
> intention to buy another computer.
>
> The problem I am having is understanding the activation. First off, I
> would guess the only way I can buy XP now, is a used copy from ebay or
> something like that. BUt can I activate a used copy? And even if I
> was able to find an unopened new copy. what happens if MS abandons XP,
> which I have a feeling they will do soon, just like they did with 2K
> and 95 and 98. Will they still activate it, or is buying XP now just
> a waste of money.
>
> One of the main reasons I never upgraded was because of that
> activation. I know that changing hardware invalidates it, and I am
> always adding new hardware, change the motherboard if I get a deal on
> a more powerful one, and whenever I get a faster (older) computer, I
> often move my harddrive (with all my data) to the newer computer.
> Doing this was easy with Win98, and I have done it with Win2k, but it
> takes a little more fussing around. I heard that this is not possible
> with XP, mostly because of the activation.
>
> With this in mind, does this mean I will have to buy a new copy of XP
> everytime I do a major upgrade of my hardware, and reactivate
> everytime I do a minor upgrade? This all sounds like a big hassle,
> which I am not all that willing to do, not to mention the fact that I
> do not like giving out personal information to ANY company, in this
> day and age of identity theft. But it looks like I have no other
> choice other than getting a Macintosh computer, or installing Linux
> (neither which I want to do).
>
> Is there any way around this? Is there any version of XP, or "hack"
> that eliminates the need to activate? I'm not trying to get XP for
> free, but at the same time I am not pleased about being treated like a
> criminal by MS.
>
> When I say "upgrade" I do not mean to actually "upgrade 2K". I intend
> to keep 2K and dual boot to XP. Presently I dual boot to 98se and
> 2Kpro, but I'll move 98 to another computer, since I dont think it's
> possible to triple boot.
>
>
/ activate as often as necessary.
If an oem version, then its locked to the original hardware.
If you change a motherboard you would need to run a repair installation of
winxp and install the new drivers
Winxp is coming to the end of its support lifecycle
Personally I couldn't see any need or purpose to dual boot win2k and winxp,
unless you have some hardware only supported by win2k. All the software I
had under win2k ran fine on winxp
wrote in message
news:cm0cr5pihijuoq0gonr6tvri7f7g4t4n4v@4ax.com...
> I have been running Win2000Pro for years. I really dont want to
> upgrade, but I am seeing more and more things that do not run on 2K
> anymore. I do not have the hardware to run Win7, and wont go near
> Vista for any reason. I guess XP is my only choice. I have no
> intention to buy another computer.
>
> The problem I am having is understanding the activation. First off, I
> would guess the only way I can buy XP now, is a used copy from ebay or
> something like that. BUt can I activate a used copy? And even if I
> was able to find an unopened new copy. what happens if MS abandons XP,
> which I have a feeling they will do soon, just like they did with 2K
> and 95 and 98. Will they still activate it, or is buying XP now just
> a waste of money.
>
> One of the main reasons I never upgraded was because of that
> activation. I know that changing hardware invalidates it, and I am
> always adding new hardware, change the motherboard if I get a deal on
> a more powerful one, and whenever I get a faster (older) computer, I
> often move my harddrive (with all my data) to the newer computer.
> Doing this was easy with Win98, and I have done it with Win2k, but it
> takes a little more fussing around. I heard that this is not possible
> with XP, mostly because of the activation.
>
> With this in mind, does this mean I will have to buy a new copy of XP
> everytime I do a major upgrade of my hardware, and reactivate
> everytime I do a minor upgrade? This all sounds like a big hassle,
> which I am not all that willing to do, not to mention the fact that I
> do not like giving out personal information to ANY company, in this
> day and age of identity theft. But it looks like I have no other
> choice other than getting a Macintosh computer, or installing Linux
> (neither which I want to do).
>
> Is there any way around this? Is there any version of XP, or "hack"
> that eliminates the need to activate? I'm not trying to get XP for
> free, but at the same time I am not pleased about being treated like a
> criminal by MS.
>
> When I say "upgrade" I do not mean to actually "upgrade 2K". I intend
> to keep 2K and dual boot to XP. Presently I dual boot to 98se and
> 2Kpro, but I'll move 98 to another computer, since I dont think it's
> possible to triple boot.
>
>