#50
Post
by hellosailor » Thu Jun 12, 2008 4:07 pm
It is more complicated than that, and the terms of the COAs change from time to time without warning.
For instance, the "to the trade" OEM versions of the OSes, the ones you buy on a new machine form a major vendor, are keyed to the BIOS and the motherboard type. If your OEM version is looking for a "BigBlue BIOS 4.5.678" that's all you can install and run it on. Burn out your motherboard, and you must replace it with the same type--or throw it out.
Then there are the "retail OEM" versions, the ones sold in trade channel for little guys to use when building and sellers computers without a big brand name and custom OS support. The retail OEM versions USED TO be tied to a computer, as defined specifically to mean "CPU, motherboard, or hard drive".
That held through NT5 (Windows2000) and Win98, for retail OEMs.
In NT4, the COA allowed multiple installations on the same computer, and even MS's own tech support recommended multiple installations on the same machine, so there was a back door for server recovery issues. With NT5, the terms changed and MS refined "hardware" to mean any widget including a keyboard, a power LED, or a case screw. ANYTHING. You betcha, I confirmed that with MS licensing division directly. But again--that was for RETAIL OEM versions. Stuff from Toshiba, IBM, and the like was still tied to the motherboard bios ONLY.
NT5 also changed the terms to one installation and one only, if you installed it twice on the same machine (say, to have an experimental version as an alternate boot) that was a violation.
XP kept those terms (it was only a dot-one upgrade to NT5.0) at first, but then they were changed AGAIN and last time I heard, MS was defining "computer" to mean "motherboard" again. They can't figure out which or who's foot to shoot in Redmond.
The only consistency is that for a big name brand (Toshiba, Dell, Lenovo, etc.) the license is for the motherboard/bios only.
On activations: MS went to great pains to clarify and publicize their policies when they brought activation into the US after trials elsewhere. There are specific counts on the components in the computer, offhand "5 and 7" and "7 and 9" IIRC. What do these mean?
The activation counter, which is in the OS code, actually enumerates the hardware in your computer. It counts "so many of these little things" and "so many of these big things". And then it looks to see if you are on a notebook or desktop. Since notebooks are expected to be used docked and undocked, they get the more generous "7 and 9" count. What's being counted? Well, the CPU type is a major item. The hard drive's serial number, CD/DVD drive serial number (yes, they have them in the firmware), the amount of RAM, the LAN MAC address, all are enumerated. As long as the counts are not exceeded WITHIN A 90DAY PERIOD, you do not have to reactivate. If you do exceed the count within a 90-day period, you must reactivate.
And MS's original promise was that would be a 5-minute-or-less toll free phone call. I know several folks that have had to make that call--they've had no problems with it. Unless your product key comes up on the list of known bootlegs, or you call them way too often, they are very good about saying "Here's your new number, have a nice day".
Do I like activation? Hell no, and "Genuine Validation" sometimes just plain fails to work. Has MS done a reasonable job at making it painless? Yes. Despite all sorts of rumours and bad information.
So...on Polo's question? If the motherboards are good--you can fix the rest and reactivate them. If the motherboards are fried, your COA allows for replacing them--like for like, with the same series of motherboards, but that's all. Otherwise, you can only use your old OS to qualify for some upgrades, according to whatever upgrade offers are out there.