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| Guest | 32bit AND 64bit Vista Ultimate? (Dual Boot Activation problems) Running XP Pro and bought Vista Ultimate. I have setup XP, 32bit & 64bit vista on 3 seperate partitions. I would like to see if I can get all my Hardware working in 64bit, and see what the benifets are vs 32bit version. (Intel 6600 w/4GB Ram) I installed and configured 64bit first and have activiated the product using the Key on the package. When I booted into 32bit and tried to activate it, I get "The product key you typed is already in use". I am pretty sure I will stick with 32bit, but was hoping to see over time if 64bit was what I wanted to use, and if all the drivers work. Can I not active both my Vista copies? If I need to remove 1 copy, then, can I remove the 64bit partition and just stick with XP and Vista 32 bit, or will trying to remove it cause boot up issues? Any links or pointers to how to do this would be great. |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Guest | Re: 32bit AND 64bit Vista Ultimate? (Dual Boot Activation problems) "Dan Ulrich" <DanUlrich@MSN.COM> wrote ... > I installed and configured 64bit first and have activiated the product > using the Key on the package. When I booted into 32bit and tried to > activate it, I get "The product key you typed is already in use". Hi Dan, Yes, unfortunately this is how activation works in Vista. The second instance of Windows, installed on a separate partition, asks to be activated after it is first started. So far, so good. But when you go to activate, Activation calculates an unique ID for the hardware, which is derived from several factors including the identity of the drive it was booted from. Even though Windows is booting from the same physical box, it is booting on a different partition; so Activation calculates a different hardware ID for that instance of Windows. Thus it thinks that it is on a different machine; and says, No this Windows is already in use. Personally I think this is a poor design on Microsoft's part - you should be able to boot any number of instances of a Windows licence on the same physical box, without penalty. Although, in fairness to Microsoft, they probably didn't plan it this way deliberately. I suspect the Program Managers in the Activation team just don't realise how common it is to dual boot; so it's a kind of unintended side-effect of anti-piracy. You can continue to use Windows for up to 30 days, without Activation. Most things continue to work normally during that time. So one solution would be to simply not activate, until you've decided whether to go 32 bit or 64 bit.Less than perfect, but it may be a solution. Hope this helps, -- Andrew McLaren amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au |
My System Specs![]() |
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