View Full Version : For those constantly rebuilding their XP computers
riffer
7th October 2004, 13:14
If you're like me you rebuild your computer lots. Unlike me, you probably don't have a copy of the Corporate Install of Windows XP Pro.
If you're sick of reactivating Windows XP after every rebuild or hardware mod, try this:
If you have to reinstall Windows XP you normally will have to re-activate too. Well not anymore. Just copy "wpa.dbl" after you activated the first time. It is located in the system32 folder. Now if you reinstall Win XP just copy it back and you're up and running again.
Here's how to check if your copy of XP is Activated:
Go to the Run box and type in oobe/msoobe /a and hit Ok.
There is your answer.
Marmoot
7th October 2004, 16:02
Just out of interest....... <_<
if someone has a *ahem* free *ahem* copy of windows XP installation where activation is not possible :o and you copy that file from other computer with *ahem* activated windows xp..... :o that theoritically activates the computer with *ahem* free *ahem* windows, innit?
just out of curiousity.
I assure you 100% that my laptop got a legit registered version.
:o
k14
7th October 2004, 16:10
Yip, i have the corporate copy of xp, alot less hassel. But I haven't reinstalled my comp for around 2 years now, pretty scary actually. But that is probably due to the fact that it is still fast enough for my liking that I haven't bothered. Might do it in a month or so though. Such a pain getting everything back to the same way I have it at the moment.
Blakamin
7th October 2004, 16:35
If you're like me you rebuild your computer lots. Unlike me, you probably don't have a copy of the Corporate Install of Windows XP Pro.
If you're sick of reactivating Windows XP after every rebuild or hardware mod, try this:
If you have to reinstall Windows XP you normally will have to re-activate too. Well not anymore. Just copy "wpa.dbl" after you activated the first time. It is located in the system32 folder. Now if you reinstall Win XP just copy it back and you're up and running again.
Here's how to check if your copy of XP is Activated:
Go to the Run box and type in oobe/msoobe /a and hit Ok.
There is your answer.
You only just worked that out???? we do it at work coz all our JB's run XP
badlieutenant
7th October 2004, 17:15
had the corporate copy a week or 2 before it was released :D
Blakamin
7th October 2004, 17:18
off the top of my head... FCKGW-RHQQ2.....
Ghost Lemur
7th October 2004, 18:33
had the corporate copy a week or 2 before it was released :D
Ditto.
Then I went with the coporate with sp1 slipstreamed into it.
Then I went with teh Mighty Linux.
Spyware? Virii? Stupid EULAs? $$$?
Bahahahaha :killingme
*There's some things money can't buy* /mastercard ad
jrandom
7th October 2004, 18:52
that theoritically activates the computer with *ahem* free *ahem* windows, innit?
Nup. Don't work. If it did, why would Microsoft have bothered with the online activation nonsense and not just kept shipping things with use-anywhere install keys?
Read up on 'digital signatures' and 'authentication'. Inneresting stuff. It's what lies behind the necessity of l33tly cr4xx0rz1ng XP; ie, why you have to apply a patch to executable code on your machine to run it without activation.
badlieutenant
7th October 2004, 19:03
Ditto.
Then I went with the coporate with sp1 slipstreamed into it.
Then I went with teh Mighty Linux.
Spyware? Virii? Stupid EULAs? $$$?
Bahahahaha :killingme
*There's some things money can't buy* /mastercard ad
thinking of going that way myself. very stable, what blue screens ? :D
flipper
7th October 2004, 19:15
on topic...
..Or you could just use something like Nortons Ghost (or even use XP's backup tool) and take regular backups so you have known documented checkpoints you can restore back too..
Keep a txt file and every time you install software you care about put a note in the txt file.. document your backups there as well.. (take a backuo whenever you install somethin major or important) Of course you'll need a second partition or physical drive. Oh yeah, and store your My Documents on that other partiton/drive as well.
Takes a bit of discipline.. but if you know enough to install XP & drivers etc you can do it...
My 3 cents. Works for my 7 PC's Xp or otherwise.
Cheers
dhunt
7th October 2004, 19:43
thinking of going that way myself. very stable, what blue screens ? :D
If you like a computer that never crashes linux is the way. I do get blue screens on my linux screen saver and it does look exactly like a windoze box.
Skunk
7th October 2004, 19:55
At the risk of being bagged - I went MacOSX (Free BSD based). No hassles, and good even on old machines (pre 2000 this one).
Tried Linux for a year or two. No bad. The GUI is better now (that's what sent me ot OSX).
badlieutenant
7th October 2004, 20:34
I downloaded some copies of that linspire, formaly known as lindoze untill the microsoft legal begals came round. its alright, has a online download this application for a small fee. If I could be bothered it would be cheap and legal option to my other cheap and legal option :devil2:
Ghost Lemur
7th October 2004, 20:49
At the risk of being bagged - I went MacOSX (Free BSD based). No hassles, and good even on old machines (pre 2000 this one).
Tried Linux for a year or two. No bad. The GUI is better now (that's what sent me ot OSX).
I got to agree to a certain extent. Since going with the BSD back end mOS and certainly increased in my ratings to the point where if someoe gave me a sexy 17" widescreen powerbook, I'd probably leave OSX on there.
Gotta say there is NOTHING I miss about windows. Mmmmm DoomIII on Linux (for those of you who were going to come back at me with "b..b...bbut what about games"). :D :banana:
*how'd cajun get into my post*
riffer
7th October 2004, 21:11
I have four computers at home. An Acer Extensa 366T laptop in the lounge where I surf at home mostly running Windows 2000 Prof SP6, a Compaq Deskpro 4000 (5200MMX) running Mandrake 9.1, A Compaq EN running XP Pro SP2, and my beloved G4 Sawtooth running 10.3.5.
No particularly OS loyalty. I use what gets the job done. I started with a computer my Dad and I built from plans in an Electronics Australia magazine (hex code programming - urgh), then Commodore 64, then mainframe Unix, then went to VMS, then DOS, Windows 2, OS/2, MacOs 6.0.8, MacOs7, Windows 95, Windows NT, MacOs 8, Windows 2000, MacOs X Public Beta, MacOs X (all feline species up to Panther so far). Also tried a number of different *nixes on Macintosh before MacOs X came out. LinuxPPC was good, but the company went bust. Learnt a lot about Open Firmware on macs out of that one.
So I guess I've used just about all of them.
Not too bad for a guy who's never been in IT... :shifty:
Blakamin
7th October 2004, 21:24
Nup. Don't work. If it did, why would Microsoft have bothered with the online activation nonsense and not just kept shipping things with use-anywhere install keys?
Read up on 'digital signatures' and 'authentication'. Inneresting stuff. It's what lies behind the necessity of l33tly cr4xx0rz1ng XP; ie, why you have to apply a patch to executable code on your machine to run it without activation.
it WILL activate copies of windows.... like i said , we use it at work... and have for a month...will take photos of the process if ya like... next time we do it...
none of our boxes are online or lan connected so it saves us $$$ in time by not ringing MS
[edit] just rang the manager and found out where we got the info....MS support...
badlieutenant
7th October 2004, 21:35
I got to agree to a certain extent. Since going with the BSD back end mOS and certainly increased in my ratings to the point where if someoe gave me a sexy 17" widescreen powerbook, I'd probably leave OSX on there.
Gotta say there is NOTHING I miss about windows. Mmmmm DoomIII on Linux (for those of you who were going to come back at me with "b..b...bbut what about games"). :D :banana:
*how'd cajun get into my post*
ahhh fps ? does it run better on linux ?
riffer
7th October 2004, 21:41
ahhh fps ? does it run better on linux ?
Don't have any evidence but I would imagine it may very well run faster.
Carmack creates most of his code on a *nix box. I've heard the game is ported (albeit extremely well) to windows.
Cajun
8th October 2004, 06:48
I got to agree to a certain extent. Since going with the BSD back end mOS and certainly increased in my ratings to the point where if someoe gave me a sexy 17" widescreen powerbook, I'd probably leave OSX on there.
Gotta say there is NOTHING I miss about windows. Mmmmm DoomIII on Linux (for those of you who were going to come back at me with "b..b...bbut what about games"). :D :banana:
*how'd cajun get into my post*
The banana man is everywhere
toads
8th October 2004, 07:05
I have four computers at home. An Acer Extensa 366T laptop in the lounge where I surf at home mostly running Windows 2000 Prof SP6, a Compaq Deskpro 4000 (5200MMX) running Mandrake 9.1, A Compaq EN running XP Pro SP2, and my beloved G4 Sawtooth running 10.3.5.
No particularly OS loyalty. I use what gets the job done. I started with a computer my Dad and I built from plans in an Electronics Australia magazine (hex code programming - urgh), then Commodore 64, then mainframe Unix, then went to VMS, then DOS, Windows 2, OS/2, MacOs 6.0.8, MacOs7, Windows 95, Windows NT, MacOs 8, Windows 2000, MacOs X Public Beta, MacOs X (all feline species up to Panther so far). Also tried a number of different *nixes on Macintosh before MacOs X came out. LinuxPPC was good, but the company went bust. Learnt a lot about Open Firmware on macs out of that one.
So I guess I've used just about all of them.
Not too bad for a guy who's never been in IT... :shifty:
very impressive, I kknow everyone will shoot me down in flames for saying this but I love XP, and as for restore points, run spybot every few days and it creates restore points at the same time as removing spyware, couldn't be easier.
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