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On 6/18/06, Jones, John (US) <John.Jones@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
The key is sufficient if you have the right kind of XP CD. If the 6GB had XP Pro on it and you've a XP Pro CD, that's a good sign. An XP Home CD wouldn't work with an XP Pro key. But it goes a bit deeper than that. OEM, Retail, and MSDN CDs (I think there's a fourth) for XP Pro (and Home) are also slightly different and a key for the OEM version won't work with a Retail CD, etc. Your key & CD need to match.
Are MSDN WinXPs targeted to Windows developers? If so, I don't think we would have necessarily had that one. Could the 64-bit XP be the fourth one you're thinking of? Even more, an XP (Pro or Home) CD with no pre-loaded SP vs. one with SP1
vs. one with SP2 are also keyed uniquely.
Makes sense. I don't know how to tell from looking at a key what CD it matches with.
I don't know if anyone can tell.
I'm sure Microsoft covered itself on that one. Quite a pain, yes? Eh. I've come to expect no less from Microsoft. Worst case, you can buy XP Pro OEM for about $135-140. Not worth it. My worst case is to borrow an XP Pro disk and try it. If it doesn't work, no biggee. I seem to recall (not saying much there) that there were "corporate" versions of XP Pro that did not require a product key. Or was it that the same product key could be used for multiple (thousands of) installs? - Dan
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