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Stanley Pain posted:Overall your system isn't that great for playing most modern games :| It's actually pretty awful, the CPU and GPU are also pretty crap.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 13:10 |
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# ? Apr 24, 2024 14:26 |
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big mean giraffe posted:It's actually pretty awful, the CPU and GPU are also pretty crap. I was trying to be nice
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 13:23 |
Stanley Pain posted:Overall your system isn't that great for playing most modern games :| Well, first of all, I went into services.msc and MSConfig and disabled an absolute shitload of superfluous and unnecessary services which were sucking up RAM and CPU time and now things seem to be running considerably better. Prototype still runs like poo poo but that appears to be sound related and occurred in XP too. Games like Supreme Commander and even Homeworld 2 weer running like poo poo but the aforementioned steps seem to have fixed that issue. Same goes for the video stuttering. Apparently one of the myriad services that 7 crams into memory (or perhaps a combination thereof) was sucking down enough CPU time that it was chugging like hell. I've seen this problem posted about all over the 'net and yet what I just did wasn't suggested anywhere that I looked, yet it worked like a treat. big mean giraffe posted:It's actually pretty awful, the CPU and GPU are also pretty crap. Hold on then while I conjure money out of my rear end so I can buy a liquid nitrogen cooled umpteen core hypercomputer with 64 gigs of RAM and a USB blowjob device. Hexenritter fucked around with this message at 13:33 on Jul 7, 2009 |
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 13:30 |
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CitrusFrog posted:Well, first of all, I went into services.msc and MSConfig and disabled an absolute shitload of superfluous and unnecessary I'm going to pretend you didn't do that :P CitrusFrog posted:USB blowjob device. I want me one of these. Moreso if it has a suck/blow switch on it
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 13:37 |
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CitrusFrog posted:Hold on then while I conjure money out of my rear end so I can buy a liquid nitrogen cooled umpteen core hypercomputer with 64 gigs of RAM and a USB blowjob device. You could build a computer for $400 or less than ran games a lot better than the one you have now. I'm pretty sure Prototype will never run above 'crap' on a p4 system, especially with an 8600.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 13:42 |
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CitrusFrog posted:Well, first of all, I went into services.msc and MSConfig and disabled an absolute shitload of superfluous and unnecessary services which were sucking up RAM and CPU time and now things seem to be running considerably better. Stop doing poo poo like this. CitrusFrog posted:Prototype still runs like poo poo but that appears to be sound related and occurred in XP too. You're trying to run a game that came out less than 1 month ago on hardware that was built >5 years ago? Hmm... Let's look at this for a moment. CitrusFrog posted:Games like Supreme Commander and even Homeworld 2 weer running like poo poo but the aforementioned steps seem to have fixed that issue. Same goes for the video stuttering. Apparently one of the myriad services that 7 crams into memory (or perhaps a combination thereof) was sucking down enough CPU time that it was chugging like hell. I've seen this problem posted about all over the 'net and yet what I just did wasn't suggested anywhere that I looked, yet it worked like a treat. This has been addressed so many times, I'm starting to feel bad for the horse, even though it's been dead for quite some time now. CitrusFrog posted:Hold on then while I conjure money out of my rear end so I can buy a liquid nitrogen cooled umpteen core hypercomputer with 64 gigs of RAM and a USB blowjob device. If you want to play modern, high-end games, you need to fork out the cash. You don't need a super high-end system, but getting to a modern CPU, GPU, and non-frankenRAM will make things run much more smoothly. I rebuilt the guts of my system in October with a C2D E7200, 8GB DDR2 400, and a motherboard to fit (previously, dual-socket Opteron) all for about $350. You don't have to do a major spend to update at least a little bit.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 13:47 |
Stanley Pain posted:I'm going to pretend you didn't do that :P Well it's not like I need the Bluetooth Support Service, Media Center Receiver, Windows Presentation Foundation, Quality Windows Audio Video Experience, the Remote Access poo poo, Telephony, Windows Error Reporting, Parental Controls or Smart Card support now, is it? quote:I want me one of these. Moreso if it has a suck/blow switch on it Me too, brings a whole new meaning to the term dongle big mean giraffe posted:You could build a computer for $400 or less than ran games a lot better than the one you have now. I'm pretty sure Prototype will never run above 'crap' on a p4 system, especially with an 8600. I have a list of upgrades I plan on getting when finances permit, I'm just going to have to get a better PSU before I do anything else, and I have my eye on this one, which has a loving shitload of amperage on the 12v rails, which would easily allow for SLI. As for Prototype, it runs better when I rename one of the game's two audio archives but I losee 60% of the game's sound, and it has a pretty atrocious memory leak too.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 13:56 |
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CitrusFrog posted:I'm running 7100 and I have to say, I really enjoy the general user experience however I've run into the following 2 problems. Your videocard isn't really well suited to playing games to begin with. I'm not going to pick on you about your system specs, I understand it's a difficult economy and not everyone wants to build the god box to begin with. You really need a total system overhaul at some point in the next year but you can incrementally upgrade a few components to see better performance in games on Windows 7 right now. Grab a cheap Radeon 4870 512MB, they can be found in SA-Mart for like $65-90. If you can't find one there I've got a few laying around at work, toss me a PM if interested. Video stuttering is pretty common on old P4's but it could be a mixture of things. I would try GPU decoding as someone else suggested for now to start ruling things out. quote:Well it's not like I need the Bluetooth Support Service, Media Center Receiver, Windows Presentation Foundation, Quality Windows Audio Video Experience, the Remote Access poo poo, Telephony, Windows Error Reporting, Parental Controls or Smart Card support now, is it? No but disabling them didn't really accomplish anything either.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 13:56 |
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CitrusFrog posted:Well it's not like I need the Bluetooth Support Service, Media Center Receiver, Windows Presentation Foundation, Quality Windows Audio Video Experience, the Remote Access poo poo, Telephony, Windows Error Reporting, Parental Controls or Smart Card support now, is it? Except you don't know what else is dependent upon some oddball component in one of those and your computer will break and you'll be all like: "what's going on with my pc, dudes?" This has been discussed to death on SHSC...consensus is leave services alone. You're not getting any noticeable performance increase above the placebo effect.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 14:02 |
AlexDeGruven posted:Stop doing poo poo like this. It's not like I just went in and randomly started unchecking boxes, I looked at the services individually, assessed what they were for and whether or not disabling them would cause system instability, and tried not to get too overzealous. However, surely you can't look at the services tab in MSConfig and fail to be surprised at just how many more services they crammed in that not everyone will need. quote:You're trying to run a game that came out less than 1 month ago on hardware that was built >5 years ago? Hmm... Let's look at this for a moment. Yes, yes, I know. I'm trying to get by with what I have until I can update, but other financial commitments are regrettably more important than my gaming pleasure. quote:This has been addressed so many times, I'm starting to feel bad for the horse, even though it's been dead for quite some time now. I can't argue against the results I personally experienced from disabling services I felt were unnecessary quote:If you want to play modern, high-end games, you need to fork out the cash. You don't need a super high-end system, but getting to a modern CPU, GPU, and non-frankenRAM will make things run much more smoothly. That's the plan. 4GB of more recent RAM will be a start, and I have been scouting around for potential upgrades for other components. Socket 775's still the cpu type du jour, right? The Gunslinger posted:Your videocard isn't really well suited to playing games to begin with. I'm not going to pick on you about your system specs, I understand it's a difficult economy and not everyone wants to build the god box to begin with. You really need a total system overhaul at some point in the next year but you can incrementally upgrade a few components to see better performance in games on Windows 7 right now. Grab a cheap Radeon 4870 512MB, they can be found in SA-Mart for like $65-90. If you can't find one there I've got a few laying around at work, toss me a PM if interested. I know I've been needing it for a while. quote:Video stuttering is pretty common on old P4's but it could be a mixture of things. I would try GPU decoding as someone else suggested for now to start ruling things out. I don't know how or why but my performance did in fact improve afterwards. Edit: ok, ok, bad CF for stopping services. Hexenritter fucked around with this message at 14:25 on Jul 7, 2009 |
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 14:20 |
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CitrusFrog posted:It's not like I just went in and randomly started unchecking boxes, I looked at the services individually, assessed what they were for and whether or not disabling them would cause system instability, and tried not to get too overzealous. However, surely you can't look at the services tab in MSConfig and fail to be surprised at just how many more services they crammed in that not everyone will need. quote:I don't know how or why but my performance did in fact improve afterwards.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 14:23 |
-Dethstryk- posted:If you weren't using the services, there's a good chance they were using such a minuscule amount of resources only the machine itself could notice. Based on multiple games suddenly working as intended, and video no longer stuttering?
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 14:27 |
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quote:I can't argue against the results I personally experienced from disabling services I felt were unnecessary Placebo effect. None of the services you listed would have negatively impacted performance to a noticeable degree. At best you are gaining probably milliseconds of startup time. Either way, you seem to understand you need a system upgrade at some point in the future if you really want better performance so let's leave it at that. quote:Based on multiple games suddenly working as intended, and video no longer stuttering? What service magically fixed this problem? That's the problem The Gunslinger fucked around with this message at 14:29 on Jul 7, 2009 |
# ? Jul 7, 2009 14:27 |
The Gunslinger posted:Either way, you seem to understand you need a system upgrade at some point in the future if you really want better performance so let's leave it at that. Agreed. So how 'bout that Aero Shake huh
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 14:28 |
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I came across something rather amusing the other day. My LifeCam would cause an instant bluescreen the second I tried to activate it in Skype, every time. So I figured I'd hop on Microsoft's website and see if there was a new driver. Right on the main hardware page there's a link to "Beta drivers for Windows 7" or something, so I click that, see a link for webcams, and download some file, let's call it LifeCam_2_9_1.exe (I already deleted the installer, but it was something like that). I go to install the file, it starts out normally, but as it's installing Windows pops up this potentially useful warning that it has blocked the installation of LifeCam32.exe due to a compatibility problem, and also says "Click here to download an update to resolve the problem." Clicking the link takes me directly to the download of LifeCam_2_9_1.exe
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 14:38 |
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CitrusFrog posted:Based on multiple games suddenly working as intended, and video no longer stuttering? That's not going to happen simply from freeing up resources used by those services you listed (and others). They do not use enough to make that difference. You had something more profound wrong that just so happened to remedy itself possibly through disabling services, though likely when just messing around somehow. I'd be looking at the more pronounced issue than simply thinking you 'fixed' it by disabling services.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 14:40 |
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I've downloaded the 64 bit version of the RC twice in the last day for a build I'm doing next month and both times the Microsoft download manager has said the file is corrupt after its finished downloading. Am I doing something wrong or is the file just 'corrupt' and it should actually work?
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 14:44 |
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ibroxmassive posted:Media Player Classic-HC 64 bit resolves some framerate issues on .mkv files in Windows 7 as well, at least for me. Was using ffdshow and getting absolutely terrible performance (on my poo poo computer, but hey). Did this, works amazing.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 16:05 |
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Johnny! posted:I've downloaded the 64 bit version of the RC twice in the last day for a build I'm doing next month and both times the Microsoft download manager has said the file is corrupt after its finished downloading. Am I doing something wrong or is the file just 'corrupt' and it should actually work? Shouldn't you be able to check the hashsum? 64-bit English ISO SHA1: FC867FE1AB2E0A9796F9E4D155B44EA6998F4874 (first page of this thread)
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 16:11 |
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Johnny! posted:I've downloaded the 64 bit version of the RC twice in the last day for a build I'm doing next month and both times the Microsoft download manager has said the file is corrupt after its finished downloading. Am I doing something wrong or is the file just 'corrupt' and it should actually work?
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 16:11 |
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Actually if you're trying to run the Prototype PC version it has known framerate and stuttering issues. There's in depth troubleshooting guides on it on the Prototype forums but even after that it still has serious issues. I wouldn't use that as an indicator of your system performance.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 16:17 |
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Ignited posted:So I may have an old laptop with an xp key on the bottom - any chance that will work on a desktop if I download a XP ISO? CD Keys on case stickers will only work with OEM versions of Windows XP. Attempting to use these stickers on a Retail copy of XP or one downloaded from Technet/MSDN will NOT work. You basically have two choices for disc. Choice #1 is finding a Windows XP disc specific to your manufacturer. Let's say you have a Dell, and your sticker is for Windows XP Home. If you can get your hands on a Dell Windows XP Home CD, not only will it install, but it won't even ask for your CD Key or need to be activated. These discs come slipstreamed with special drivers which basically makes it so activation isn't required as long as the hardware you're installing the OS on is actually from Dell. It's worth noting that I don't think every manufacturer actually has this kind of disc. I know for a fact that Dell, HP and Gateway do, but some other manufacturers may only have "system restore" discs. These will work, of course, but are much more specific and thus much harder to find (e.g. the Dell Windows XP Home CD will work on ANY Dell PC, desktop or laptop, manufactured within XP's lifetime, whereas a system restore CD would only work for a particular model or series). Choice #2 is finding a generic OEM or system builder CD. These WILL ask for the key and require activation, but they will work with any CD key on a sticker on a system case.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 16:32 |
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univbee posted:CD Keys on case stickers will only work with OEM versions of Windows XP. Attempting to use these stickers on a Retail copy of XP or one downloaded from Technet/MSDN will NOT work. You basically have two choices for disc. It is important to note that if you go with Choice #1 you must install to the original laptop that the key sticker is on. Dell (and others) install CDs often require a specific "tattoo" to be present in the BIOS for the install to go through. Choice #2 should work on any computer, although installing OEM copies of Windows on new hardware is a violation of the TOS/EULA. MS is not known to work too hard checking this out though.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 16:58 |
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How does the upgrade process work? I'm going to go from 32 bit XP Home to 64 bit 7 Pro, so I will need to do a complete re-installation. Will it ask me to put my XP key in when I try to install it, or what?
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 18:41 |
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kapinga posted:It is important to note that if you go with Choice #1 you must install to the original laptop that the key sticker is on. Dell (and others) install CDs often require a specific "tattoo" to be present in the BIOS for the install to go through. I'm thinking about choice two - how hard do you think it would be to find a OEM Win XP Home ISO so I can have that disk ready to go for when win 7 comes out. Also I hope this works, heh.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 18:55 |
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that one guy posted:How does the upgrade process work? I'm going to go from 32 bit XP Home to 64 bit 7 Pro, so I will need to do a complete re-installation. Will it ask me to put my XP key in when I try to install it, or what? Well, no one knows for sure, but the best guess is that when you boot the computer from the install CD, it will look for the XP install to make sure that you're really "upgrading" from XP. It may require you to install your upgrade copy to the same partition as your current XP install (and stuff all the old data into Windows.old), or it may let you install somewhere else, I haven't been able to find solid info on that.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 18:56 |
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that one guy posted:How does the upgrade process work? I'm going to go from 32 bit XP Home to 64 bit 7 Pro, so I will need to do a complete re-installation. Will it ask me to put my XP key in when I try to install it, or what? You should really try reading the last two pages because that's basically what I asked.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 18:56 |
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kapinga posted:Well, no one knows for sure, but the best guess is that when you boot the computer from the install CD, it will look for the XP install to make sure that you're really "upgrading" from XP. It may require you to install your upgrade copy to the same partition as your current XP install (and stuff all the old data into Windows.old), or it may let you install somewhere else, I haven't been able to find solid info on that. I figure because its XP, Win 7 will look for XP, then a clean install wiping most of XP away, wouldn't it?
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 18:58 |
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ufarn posted:Try downloading it with another browser. Thanks, downloaded in IE and it passes hash check.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 19:01 |
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Ignited posted:I figure because its XP, Win 7 will look for XP, then a clean install wiping most of XP away, wouldn't it? I honestly don't know, but I doubt it will actually wipe the partition. Anything that gets put into Windows.old is not needed by the system at all, so the user is free to delete it at a later time (after they have salvaged their data). There's no real reason for the installer to physically wipe everything out except for space issues. Edit: As to your question about getting an OEM XP CD: you might have some friends with a more standard system builder disc that would be worth a shot, or you can purchase one off of Newegg (at that point, just buy the full version of 7). There is no harm in trying the current OS CD you have for your laptop; worst case it will simply fail. kapinga fucked around with this message at 19:03 on Jul 7, 2009 |
# ? Jul 7, 2009 19:01 |
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Ignited posted:You should really try reading the last two pages because that's basically what I asked.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 19:01 |
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kapinga posted:I honestly don't know, but I doubt it will actually wipe the partition. Anything that gets put into Windows.old is not needed by the system at all, so the user is free to delete it at a later time (after they have salvaged their data). There's no real reason for the installer to physically wipe everything out except for space issues. Found a clean ISO of XP Home, found a key in the garage. I think I'm good-to-go for Oct, heres to hoping!
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 20:03 |
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Ignited posted:Found a clean ISO of XP Home, found a key in the garage. I think I'm good-to-go for Oct, heres to hoping! As long as the ISO and key are both OEM or both full retail, you'll be good.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 21:24 |
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So I went from 1 to 2.5Gb, and the change in performance is amazing. Does it get better with even more ram ? Another question: in explorer, the "new" menu is slow as hell and cluttered. Can I disable stuff easily ?
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 21:32 |
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I have no idea how it will work with Windows 7 (nor does anyone at this point), but here's how it works with Vista. ALL upgrade installations from XP to Vista are REQUIRED to be launched from the OS being upgraded, and in the case of upgrading from Windows XP, it's required to be activated. Booting from the CD and trying to insert an upgrade key WILL NOT WORK! Once this is done, the ability to do a "clean install" is presented (everything gets moved to Windows.old as others have mentioned). Ignited posted:I'm thinking about choice two - how hard do you think it would be to find a OEM Win XP Home ISO so I can have that disk ready to go for when win 7 comes out. Also I hope this works, heh. Well, any ISO you find is going to be by default. The generic ones are easy to come by, however, mostly trying to pass off as pre-slipstreamed ISOs (there was a guy called eth0 who did this with every single XP English variant every couple of months for a while). Ignited posted:Found a clean ISO of XP Home, found a key in the garage. I think I'm good-to-go for Oct, heres to hoping! When you say "found a key" what format is it in? Is it stuck to a case? Is it blueish and does it have a metal strip in it? Does it say OEM? Also bear in mind that OEM copies can only be installed on the computer they originally came with legally. If it's a yellow/orange label that just has a product key on it, and it's stuck to a CD envelope, it's actually a retail copy.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 22:25 |
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Ok I'm having a weird issue. The RC is asking me for my activation key, but it is not accepting either 0 or 1 as acceptable characters. This is a problem, as both of those digits appear a lot in my product key. Does anyone know what is going on?
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 22:47 |
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TTBF posted:Ok I'm having a weird issue. The RC is asking me for my activation key, but it is not accepting either 0 or 1 as acceptable characters. This is a problem, as both of those digits appear a lot in my product key. Does anyone know what is going on?
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 22:50 |
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I'm not sure where my CD or anything is for my copy of XP. I did find a program that lets you look at the registration keys for your installed MS products, however. When I upgrade from XP to 7, all I'll really need is the registration key - so this program should be sufficient, right?
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 23:22 |
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xamphear posted:A Microsoft product key is 25 characters long and looks like XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX-XXXXX and really doesn't contain any 1s or 0s (because they're too easily confused with o and l). That's what Windows 7 says the product key is.
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 23:54 |
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# ? Apr 24, 2024 14:26 |
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The product ID isn't the same as the key
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# ? Jul 7, 2009 23:55 |