Miracleboe
02-25-2007, 04:40 PM
As said in earlier threads they say that vista sales are down because of piracy and because or XP being sooo ... Good and no one wants to upgrade. They obviously know about the pirating and people downloading it but, cant they do more to stop this? Like say instead of creating one hard copy disk with CD-Keys they could make each CD have a different Key in the program sooo that CD can only be used on one machine once it is registered, this would render Key generators useless. If they were able to stop the piracy would the price of Vista go down? I am considering Getting Vista but not until the price falls because I cant just get the upgrade.
YukonMaster
02-25-2007, 04:59 PM
I don't think they would go down, prices for vista are competitive on the windows market and are in the same range as XP was at release.
Im New
02-25-2007, 07:37 PM
it doesnt matter what they do...people will always find a way ro hack it
Piracy discussions are not allowed on these forums.
However, there is a widely known loophole that will allow you to use a Vista upgrade as a clean install. This we can talk about, procedures below:
Step 1. Boot the PC from the Vista DVD.
Step 2. Select "Install Now," but do not enter the Product Key from the Vista packaging. Leave the input box blank. Also, turn off the option Automatically activate Windows when I'm online. In the next dialog box that appears, confirm that you really do want to install Vista without entering a Product Key.
Step 3. Correctly indicate the version of Vista that you're installing: Home Basic, Home Premium, Business, or Ultimate.
Step 4. Select the "Custom (Advanced)" install, not the "Upgrade" install.
Step 5. Vista copies files at length and reboots itself one or more times. Wait for the install to complete. At this point, you might think that you could "activate" Vista, but you can't. That's because you haven't installed the Vista upgrade yet. To do that, run the DVD's setup.exe program again, but this time from the Vista desktop. The easiest way to start setup again is to eject and then reinsert the DVD.
Step 6. Click "Install Now." Select Do not get the latest updates for installation. (You can check for these updates later.)
Step 7. This time, do enter the Product Key from the Vista packaging. Once again, turn off the option Automatically activate Windows when I'm online.
Step 8. On this second install, make sure to select "Upgrade," not "Custom (Advanced)." You're not doing a clean install now, you're upgrading to Vista.
Step 9. Wait while Vista copies files and reboots itself. No user interaction is required. Do not boot from the DVD when asked if you'd like to do so. Instead, wait a few seconds and the setup process will continue on its way. Some DOS-like, character-mode menus will appear, but don't interact with them. After a few seconds, the correct choice will run for you automatically.
Step 10. After you click a button labeled Start in the Thank You dialog box, Vista's login screen will eventually appear. Enter the username and password that you selected during the first install. You're done upgrading to Vista.
Step 11. Within 30 days, you must "activate" your copy of Vista or it'll lose functionality. To activate Vista, click Show more details in the Welcome Center that automatically displays upon each boot-up, then click Activate Windows now. If you've dismissed the Welcome Center, access the correct dialog box by clicking Start, Control Panel, System & Maintenance, System. If you purchased a legitimate copy of Vista, it should quickly activate over the Internet. (You can instead activate by calling Microsoft on the phone, which avoids your PC exchanging information with Microsoft's server.)
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