- Jun 8, 2010
- 71
- 0
- 66
A customer asked me to re-install Windows XP Professional on their computer. They supposedly cannot locate their original Windows XP Professional cd. Generally this is not much of an issue as most of the computers I end up working on are branded and have an OEM key affixed to the case.
In this case, there is no product key sticker. I used Magical Jelly Bean, a keyfinder, to locate the Windows product key and it reported back as being installed from "Full Packaged Product" media. My best guess was that this means the original install disc was a full retail cd. To test my theory, I used my own Windows XP Professional Retail cd on a virtual machine to attempt to install Windows and use the product key, but the installer states that the product key is invalid. It also does not work with a Volume License image or OEM image.
Do the retail product keys work with any retail image like any OEM product keys work with the OEM image or are they uniquely identified on/tied to the disc itself? Is there a difference between product keys for a full retail cd versus a retail upgrade cd?
Besides the vague description in the keyfinder, is there another way to check what version of the Windows cd was used to install the operating system when there are no product key stickers attached?
Is there an easy way to determine if the product key is in fact a genuine product key without going online and running the validation tool on the system in question? In this case, any attempt to access the internet, even launching the Microsoft Update shortcut, results in a ton of random popups until the system runs out of memory and freezes, which I assume is why they wanted Windows re-installed in the first place.
-MrCaffeineX
In this case, there is no product key sticker. I used Magical Jelly Bean, a keyfinder, to locate the Windows product key and it reported back as being installed from "Full Packaged Product" media. My best guess was that this means the original install disc was a full retail cd. To test my theory, I used my own Windows XP Professional Retail cd on a virtual machine to attempt to install Windows and use the product key, but the installer states that the product key is invalid. It also does not work with a Volume License image or OEM image.
Do the retail product keys work with any retail image like any OEM product keys work with the OEM image or are they uniquely identified on/tied to the disc itself? Is there a difference between product keys for a full retail cd versus a retail upgrade cd?
Besides the vague description in the keyfinder, is there another way to check what version of the Windows cd was used to install the operating system when there are no product key stickers attached?
Is there an easy way to determine if the product key is in fact a genuine product key without going online and running the validation tool on the system in question? In this case, any attempt to access the internet, even launching the Microsoft Update shortcut, results in a ton of random popups until the system runs out of memory and freezes, which I assume is why they wanted Windows re-installed in the first place.
-MrCaffeineX