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Updating Drivers Can Cause Vista Deactivation

Oct 23, 2007    (Click to Rate!) Loading ... Loading ...

Technology


Laurence Hartje just sent along an awesome post from James Bannan over at APC Mag. I’ll give you a hint what it’s about: Microsoft is fucking retarded.

Give it a read:

Just over a month ago I swapped over the graphics card on my Vista Ultimate box. There were some new DirectX 10-based titles out and I couldn’t get the benefit on my old DirectX 9 card. The swap-over went well and I went on my merry gaming way.

Then a few days ago I got a Windows Activation prompt – I had three days to activate Windows or I’d be bumped back to RFM (Reduced Functionality Mode). What the? My copy of Vista was activated, and a graphics card change shouldn’t have triggered deactivation… surely!

I was able to reactivate easily enough, although as the product key was already in use (by me!) I couldn’t reactivate automatically, but had to speak to a Microsoft customer service representative.

I got the code easily enough, but it didn’t explain why Vista had deactivated, so I got in touch with Microsoft about the problem.

They sent me some special utilities to run which gathered the history of hardware changes on that machine since activation, and it turns out that my disk controller had changed, so the graphics card change was the final change which tripped deactivation.

The only problem? I had never changed my disk controller at any point. Apparently because I had upgraded the Intel Matrix Storage Manager application, this was reported as a major hardware change event.

On their own, neither event was enough to trigger deactivation, but cumulatively they were.

Still not convinced Vista sucks? Really? Then give this a read… all of it.

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This post was written by:

Riyad Kalla - who has written 1727 posts on The “Break it Down” Blog.

"Ultimately I just want to provide a resource that folks find useful."

1 Comments For This Post

  1. CODE PURPLE Says:

    A few months ago I got a CODE PURPLE on my HP Pavilion a1610n Media Center. Normally when you do an system restore, a little message is sent to the effect of “start system restore” but if you make any hardware changes like add more RAM… then you get the message “CODE PURPLE contact HP customer support at 1-800-xxxxxxx”

    Originally… when the victim called customer support, they would be transfered to the sales Dept. to buy a new computer after being told that their system was trashed. HP claimed that the CODE PURPLE was put there to “combat piracy” and not just put there to sabatoge peoples computers and force them into buying new ones. Well guess what?

    HP was sued.

    HP LOST!

    Lucky for me, I had an old copy of a Linux OS lying around and booted it up. I got back online and got a new, sealed Win XP pro CD with COA for $50 bucks. I would rather go without internet or run a broken Linux OS then pay $700 – $ 1000 dollars for a new PC… especially when the one I have works fine. The only thing that was wrong with it in the first place is that it was ILLEAGLY SABATOGED by HP!

1 Trackbacks For This Post

  1. The “Break it Down” Blog » Blog Archive » Microsoft Forcing Desktop Search on Users Says:

    [...] light of the latest round of Microsoft’s other shining examples of what a leading tech company does, this is just gold. [...]

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