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| How do licenses apply across dual boot installation I have just set up a dual boot environment in order to test Win7. I will have to install Office on my new Win7 partition. Can I activate the same copy of office on two different boot environments if they are running on the same physical HW? That is, does the license recognize the physical HW or the boot environment. If I cannot use/activiate in both environments without getting a new license, which is really not acceptable, do I have to de-activate my copy on XP and re-install on Win7? (Big hassle, by the way, because the whole point is to enable easy migration and have a backstop until I am sure my new environment is stable. I do not want to 'upgrade" because I want a clean registry.) |
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| Re: How do licenses apply across dual boot installation "dlandsman" <dlandsman@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:0C14C876-72F1-4914-989B-B26A22EFF940@microsoft.com... > I have just set up a dual boot environment in order to test Win7. I will > have to install Office on my new Win7 partition. > > Can I activate the same copy of office on two different boot environments > if > they are running on the same physical HW? That is, does the license > recognize the physical HW or the boot environment. > > If I cannot use/activiate in both environments without getting a new > license, which is really not acceptable, do I have to de-activate my copy > on > XP and re-install on Win7? (Big hassle, by the way, because the whole > point > is to enable easy migration and have a backstop until I am sure my new > environment is stable. I do not want to 'upgrade" because I want a clean > registry.) If you have a retail version of the software and only have it installed one time then you possibly can install it into the Win 7 partition and activate it. Retail versions allow the installation on a primary device, your Win XP install, and a "portable" device, the Win 7 install, for the exclusive use of the primary user of the primary device. (My paraphrasing. While it is technically not a portable device I don't think the Microsoft install cops will come checking. If it is an OEM version it can only be installed on the original computer (it can't be transferred to a different computer but can be used in a different operating system on the original computer) in one partition at a time. If it is an enterprise version it is the same as OEM. Of course you do realize that the Win 7 beta partition will, in all probability, have to be dumped and rebuilt when Win 7 is released as a final version and you desire to install it. |
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| Re: How do licenses apply across dual boot installation Hmmm. Sounds like I can do it. I have a retail version. Also, per what you said, I think I'd be good with even an OEM version, if it really allows one partition at a time, because, for sure, I would only be using it on one partition at a time, depending on which OS is active. Thx, Dave "LVTravel" wrote: > > > "dlandsman" <dlandsman@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:0C14C876-72F1-4914-989B-B26A22EFF940@microsoft.com... > > I have just set up a dual boot environment in order to test Win7. I will > > have to install Office on my new Win7 partition. > > > > Can I activate the same copy of office on two different boot environments > > if > > they are running on the same physical HW? That is, does the license > > recognize the physical HW or the boot environment. > > > > If I cannot use/activiate in both environments without getting a new > > license, which is really not acceptable, do I have to de-activate my copy > > on > > XP and re-install on Win7? (Big hassle, by the way, because the whole > > point > > is to enable easy migration and have a backstop until I am sure my new > > environment is stable. I do not want to 'upgrade" because I want a clean > > registry.) > > If you have a retail version of the software and only have it installed one > time then you possibly can install it into the Win 7 partition and activate > it. Retail versions allow the installation on a primary device, your Win XP > install, and a "portable" device, the Win 7 install, for the exclusive use > of the primary user of the primary device. (My paraphrasing. While it is > technically not a portable device I don't think the Microsoft install cops > will come checking. > > If it is an OEM version it can only be installed on the original computer > (it can't be transferred to a different computer but can be used in a > different operating system on the original computer) in one partition at a > time. If it is an enterprise version it is the same as OEM. > > Of course you do realize that the Win 7 beta partition will, in all > probability, have to be dumped and rebuilt when Win 7 is released as a final > version and you desire to install it. > > |
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| Re: How do licenses apply across dual boot installation From the Microsoft Software License Agreement for Office 2007: "1. OVERVIEW. These license terms permit installation and use of one copy of the software on one device, along with other rights, all as described below. 2. INSTALLATION AND USE RIGHTS. Before you use the software under a license, you must assign that license to one device. That device is the “licensed device.” A hardware partition or blade is considered to be a separate device. Use at your own risk and your own conscience. -- Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook] Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact. ALWAYS post your Outlook version. How to ask a question: http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375 After furious head scratching, dlandsman asked: | I have just set up a dual boot environment in order to test Win7. I | will have to install Office on my new Win7 partition. | | Can I activate the same copy of office on two different boot | environments if they are running on the same physical HW? That is, | does the license recognize the physical HW or the boot environment. | | If I cannot use/activiate in both environments without getting a new | license, which is really not acceptable, do I have to de-activate my | copy on XP and re-install on Win7? (Big hassle, by the way, because | the whole point is to enable easy migration and have a backstop until | I am sure my new environment is stable. I do not want to 'upgrade" | because I want a clean registry.) |
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| Re: How do licenses apply across dual boot installation Afaik, Microsoft activation software uses a "hardware hash" to determine if it is on the same computer/device as one already registered with the activation server. I have yet to have changing the HD, repartitioning or moving the system partition provoke an activation attempt. I am thinking that the software cannot tell that it is on a different partition. As Milly says, use this information "at your own risk and your own conscience". What is a "blade"? I have never heard anyone call it that. Is it a Brit thing? Earle "Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]" <what@ever> wrote in message news:e%23JKDc5%23JHA.3612@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... > From the Microsoft Software License Agreement for Office 2007: > > "1. OVERVIEW. These license terms permit installation and use of one > copy > of the software on one device, along with other rights, all as described > below. > 2. INSTALLATION AND USE RIGHTS. Before you use the software under a > license, you must assign that license to one device. That device is the > "licensed device." A hardware partition or blade is considered to be a > separate device. > > Use at your own risk and your own conscience. > > -- > Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook] > > Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact. > ALWAYS post your Outlook version. > How to ask a question: http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375 > > > After furious head scratching, dlandsman asked: > > | I have just set up a dual boot environment in order to test Win7. I > | will have to install Office on my new Win7 partition. > | > | Can I activate the same copy of office on two different boot > | environments if they are running on the same physical HW? That is, > | does the license recognize the physical HW or the boot environment. > | > | If I cannot use/activiate in both environments without getting a new > | license, which is really not acceptable, do I have to de-activate my > | copy on XP and re-install on Win7? (Big hassle, by the way, because > | the whole point is to enable easy migration and have a backstop until > | I am sure my new environment is stable. I do not want to 'upgrade" > | because I want a clean registry.) > > |
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| Re: How do licenses apply across dual boot installation Abbreviation for "Blade server" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blade_server Earle Horton wrote: > Afaik, Microsoft activation software uses a "hardware hash" to determine > if it is on the same computer/device as one already registered with the > activation server. I have yet to have changing the HD, repartitioning > or moving the system partition provoke an activation attempt. I am > thinking that the software cannot tell that it is on a different > partition. As Milly says, use this information "at your own risk and > your own conscience". > > What is a "blade"? I have never heard anyone call it that. Is it a > Brit thing? > > Earle > > "Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook]" <what@ever> wrote in message > news:e%23JKDc5%23JHA.3612@TK2MSFTNGP04.phx.gbl... > >> From the Microsoft Software License Agreement for Office 2007: >> >> "1. OVERVIEW. These license terms permit installation and use of one >> copy >> of the software on one device, along with other rights, all as described >> below. >> 2. INSTALLATION AND USE RIGHTS. Before you use the software under a >> license, you must assign that license to one device. That device is the >> "licensed device." A hardware partition or blade is considered to be a >> separate device. >> >> Use at your own risk and your own conscience. >> >> -- >> Milly Staples [MVP - Outlook] >> >> Post all replies to the group to keep the discussion intact. >> ALWAYS post your Outlook version. >> How to ask a question: http://support.microsoft.com/KB/555375 >> >> >> After furious head scratching, dlandsman asked: >> >> | I have just set up a dual boot environment in order to test Win7. I >> | will have to install Office on my new Win7 partition. >> | >> | Can I activate the same copy of office on two different boot >> | environments if they are running on the same physical HW? That is, >> | does the license recognize the physical HW or the boot environment. >> | >> | If I cannot use/activiate in both environments without getting a new >> | license, which is really not acceptable, do I have to de-activate my >> | copy on XP and re-install on Win7? (Big hassle, by the way, because >> | the whole point is to enable easy migration and have a backstop until >> | I am sure my new environment is stable. I do not want to 'upgrade" >> | because I want a clean registry.) >> >> > |
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