7
This question is about win7, not an OEM license. I'm planning on getting windows 7 home basic for my machine. However, I'm also planning on building a PC in the next year or two.
Now, I've read around here that a single license can be installed on multiple computers, as long as you don't use it on two at the same time. Thing is: when I get the OS installed on the PC I'm gonna build, I'm gonna want to transfer a lot of stuff from one machine to the other. I'd like to do this through a local network, I don't have an external drive large enough to perform the transfer.
Since I'm gonna have the same license installed on both PCs, and since I'm gonna need them both running simultaneously for the transfer, I need to know how does the limitation actually work:
- Is it only a legal matter? (it would be wrong to use both at the same time)
- Is it also a windows update limitation? (once the second PC gets activated, the first one no longer has access to windows update)
- Is it a stronger limitation? (once the second PC gets ativated, the first one will detect it during boot and just stop working)
- Is it something else?
(The first two options wouldn't be much of a problem, since I'm only gonna use the old one for a few hours. The third option, however, could mean a headache.)
(Update: I've decided I'm either gonna transfer the HD itself to the new machine or set up a local network before activating the second machine. So my problem is solved.)
@Molly7244, The fees you need to "discuss" with an attorney is enough to buy you more than just several brand new computers. – Pacerier – 2015-10-24T01:08:37.763
possible duplicate of When installing Windows 7 or Vista, does the language, version, architecture (64-bit or 32-bit) or source (OEM, retail, or MSDN) matter?
– Tamara Wijsman – 2011-07-03T09:15:51.673you should discuss this with an attorney at law specialized in the matter, the legal aspects are different in most contries. in many countries the EULA is not legally binding, but Microsoft can and will push the killswitch as they see fit. SU is a place to ask for help with technical not legal problems. – None – 2009-11-24T19:01:28.970
@Molly: I'm more worried about the software side of this. I understand and abide the legal side: I should only use the same license on a second PC if I no longer use the first one. What I want to know is how is this verification made, and how do I know my second installation won't be suddenly blocked by the software. – Malabarba – 2009-11-24T19:17:32.917
there are ways to backup and restore the Windows 7 activation files (which might be illegal), in the end you are the mercy of Microsoft, because they are the guys with the finger on the killswitch and if they smell a rat (e.g. tampering with the activation), your license might be revoked. you want to play it safe, then play it by their rules. – None – 2009-11-24T20:05:56.623