http://imgur.com/gallery/8OJ4t
that sounds kinda screwed knowing you have to re buy a new license every time a hardware change happens
http://imgur.com/gallery/8OJ4t
that sounds kinda screwed knowing you have to re buy a new license every time a hardware change happens
Sucks but no worries for me.. I change the whole computer every 2nd year and never touches it in between... only bummer for me is if a component fails and need replacement.
Still.. the whole idea with "free windows 10"... did ANYONE really think it would be 100% forever-and-ever... nothing is 100% free and if it's 100% free it's still not 100% free!
wow this is bs! is this even legal, i mean wtf?!
Social Media at it's worst.
ANYONE that knows ANYTHING about computers knows that it is only tied to the motherboard, clearly the person who posted the pictures and the microsoft person talking to them know NOTHING about computers. This thread furthers the list of people who aren't familiar with how computers work. You can change your ram, graphics card, all your components outside the motherboard and not have to buy a copy of windows 10
I haven't used a legit version of Windows since 3.1. Doesn't bother me one bit. But this is definitely bad business practice, people in the know swap out components fairly often, and breaking their windows license because they want to upgrade their computer is just backwards logic to me.
Still sticking to Windows 7 for now it seems.
It is only tied to the motherboard ffs, people spreading things and getting others all fired up and they don't even know what the hell they are talking about
This only applies to OEM versions, which will require a clean install if the Motherboard changes.
Retail versions are free to re-install as far as I'm aware.
If you're upgrading your entire PC every few months, I think you can afford a Win 10 retail license.
2 possibilities:
- It's fake
- Someone is going to get fired (if not already)
Hardware change can invalidate your license (though not common), it's been like this since at least vista IIRC. But when that happens, either you have "activations" left (think that's 3), or not. It not, just give a call to MS, all it takes is a few minutes on the phone to allow activations again.
Oh, hi.
Yea, this Tech support guy is just ignorant, only if the motherboard changes you would need a new licence key for an OEM only.
To quote Game of Microsoft: "You know nothing John Snow!"
“Snow can only live in the winter. When it nears a fire, it dies. That is its life. It may yearn for summer, but… it can only desire it. In my hand, the snow becomes water, because this is not its world….”“The boundless Heavens and Earth are the final resting place of all living things. Life is like a journey, filled with various scenery, various paths.
Erm.
This has always been the case with OEM's, and despite that, Microsoft still lets you change hardware. I wouldn't be surprised if this is just PR talk from customer support. Maybe I'll get a chance to test it out soon.
Gaming: Dual Intel Pentium III Coppermine @ 1400mhz + Blue Orb | Asus CUV266-D | GeForce 2 Ti + ZF700-Cu | 1024mb Crucial PC-133 | Whistler Build 2267
Media: Dual Intel Drake Xeon @ 600mhz | Intel Marlinspike MS440GX | Matrox G440 | 1024mb Crucial PC-133 @ 166mhz | Windows 2000 Pro
IT'S ALWAYS BEEN WANKERSHIM | Did you mean: Fhqwhgads"Three days on a tree. Hardly enough time for a prelude. When it came to visiting agony, the Romans were hobbyists." -Mab
oh noes, I bought new mouse today, when I'll replace my mouse, windows will deactivate.
lesson learned - if you buy a mouse, also buy a windows 10 license. Thanks OP!
My nickname is "LDEV", not "idev". (both font clarification and ez bait)
yall im smh @ ur simplified english
The upgrade version (eg you received the free upgrade from MSoft) is usually tied to the motherboard. The Microsoft employee seems a little misinformed or unaware of the process himself. Changing your ram or GPU wont invalidate the OS install normally. OEM versions are stricter.
Anyway, calling Microsoft and letting them know you upgraded your system is typically enough for them to allow the same key to be used again on the new system. Worked for me recently.
Happened to me just once, vista or 7, not sure. When I saw that happening I started thinking "meh, this is going to take hours or days trying to get this back working". 5 minutes later, everything was done, my PC was back on with windows running and activated.
That was surprising.
Oh, hi.