joshbilsky******.com wrote in
news:1189532982.067970.188180@o80g2000hse.googlegr oups.com:
> I've been testing WinVista Enterprise over the past few months and
> been reading up on the license schemes. It seems to me that for a
> medium-large corporate environment, a combination of KMS
> activation (for machines that regularly connect to corporate LAN)
> and MAK activation (for field site machines/laptops that could be
> off the network for a while) would be the most logical approach.
>
> With that being said, is there a way, post-image (I've seen
> mention of a vb script), to force the machine to use one or the
> other? We have an enterprise agreement with MS so our Vista
> Enterprise DVD does not prompt for a key code during installation.
> I wasn't sure if the activation is something that needs to be set
> prior to image capture. The ideal situation would be to maintain a
> single "production" image that could be used with either
> activation scheme depending on the purpose of the machine.
Yes, there is a VBScript file included with Vista called slmgr.vbs.
You can change the product key here and force activation. Basically,
if you change it to the default product key, it will assume you are
using KMS and look for a KMS server. Otherwise, you can supply a MAK
and it will activate against Microsoft's servers.
Adam
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