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Volume Licensing.


LayZeh

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I have a copy of Windows XP Professional, i'm currently running Windows 2000 Professional. I do not want to upgrade to Windows XP Professional if activation is required. I was curious how you tell whether your copy has the volume license database on cd or the individual database. Reason being i'm not going to install it standard, i'm going to put a lot of time and effort into creating a slipstream/streamline installation that i plan to make as user-interaction free as possible, hence not requiring to activate XP would be a benefit.

Can anyone tell me a way of identifying whether or not i have a Volume License CD key and whether the media has as much to do with activiation being required as the CD key you enter.

Thanks.

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If you did not purchase the software with MANY licenses, then it's not volume licensing. I'm assuming if you don't know then you didn't purchase it. Volume licensing is for corporations, not home users. You can't buy one license in a volume licensing model.

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Hi,

I just had a look at our corporate "Windows XP Professional Volume License Version" CD. The CD label is WXPVOL_EN.

Some binaries on the volume license version are different from those on the retail version. Using a retail version CD key to install a volume license version is not possible - nor the other way round. To determine if you hold a volume license version, a retail version, or an OEM version look inside the file i386\setupp.ini. If the Pid=xxxxx270 you hold the volume license version, if Pid=xxxxxOEM it's an OEM, and if Pid=xxxxx000 it's retail.

You cannot easily tell for which product a Microsoft CD key works. I have heard about some hacker tools that could do this, but unfortunately there is no documented way to the best of my knowledge.

Another thing - for those wondering - Microsoft Office XP/2003 is not like Windows XP. The binaries are identical, and whether or not product activation is required depends entirely on the CD-key.

Unless your company has some sort of special ageement with Microsoft, I doubt that you can legally use any volume license version/key at home.

B)

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i'm using windows xp professional(corporate edition). its seems nothing problem. no cd-key n i also can upgrade to sp2. really easy.try use it.

I actually don't get the MEANING of your post.

:blink:

Windows XP Professional (Corporate Edition) is not something that you can have unless you have a "special" Volume Licensing Agreement with Microsoft.

NO ONE can legitly use it without the above.

Inducing people to "try it" without a proper license is against the RULES of this board.

The rest of your post seems actually irrelevant.

This board's scope is to share knowledge on Microsoft Operating Systems and related programs, tricks, mods, and similia.

jaclaz

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i'm using windows xp professional(corporate edition). its seems nothing problem. no cd-key n i also can upgrade to sp2. really easy.try use it.

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