Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines
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@scottalanmiller said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
Right, but since this box isn't a whitebox (they are existing systems) OEM keys aren't legally an option for purchase according to the license from MS.
It's not a white box? I don't know that the NEW box isn't a white box. Did I miss that it is pre-built?
All of the equipment is existing, the client wants to consolidate as far as the OP has described.
That would mean the boxes are used, and not white. An additional retail license would be required in any scenario we could propose.
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@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@scottalanmiller said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
Right, but since this box isn't a whitebox (they are existing systems) OEM keys aren't legally an option for purchase according to the license from MS.
It's not a white box? I don't know that the NEW box isn't a white box. Did I miss that it is pre-built?
All of the equipment is existing, the client wants to consolidate as far as the OP has described.
That would mean the boxes are used, and not white. An additional retail license would be required in any scenario we could propose.
OIC, I was thinking wrongly that they had one PC and were going to deal with a second one that might not exist yet. Yeah, if they already have it, no OEM.
The bigger issue is that the old one is almost certainly already OEM'd and can't be moved.
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@scottalanmiller said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
The bigger issue is that the old one is almost certainly already OEM'd and can't be moved
This is the part that I have questions with. If you purchase a Retail key and "build a new system" and reactivate Windows, would microsoft really lock that installation to that original equipment?
I think it would be allowed to move, since you are moving from an OEM key to a Retail key in good faith and following through with the activation process.
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@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
This is the part that I have questions with. If you purchase a Retail key and "build a new system" and reactivate Windows, would microsoft really lock that installation to that original equipment?
You mean if you buy a "second" license for the original install so that the OEM license is replaced by a Retail license? I'm 90% sure that MS would be perfectly happy with that arrangement (as they make a shit ton on that one install.)
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Re: Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines
I'd go about this very differently.
Get him a USB KVM and forget about the hassles of licensing or dealing with both Windows screwing up the UEFI boot order.
It'll be nearly the same user experience as dual booting, with having both iterations of Windows instantly available.
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@scottalanmiller said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
This is the part that I have questions with. If you purchase a Retail key and "build a new system" and reactivate Windows, would microsoft really lock that installation to that original equipment?
You mean if you buy a "second" license for the original install so that the OEM license is replaced by a Retail license? I'm 90% sure that MS would be perfectly happy with that arrangement (as they make a shit ton on that one install.)
I was thinking as a means of converting (whichever installation was moving) from OEM to Retail and activating that new product key on the Target workstation.
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@batman said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
Re: Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines
I'd go about this very differently.
Get him a USB KVM and forget about the hassles of licensing or dealing with both Windows screwing up the UEFI boot order.
It'll be nearly the same user experience as dual booting, with having both iterations of Windows instantly available.
That is also another perfectly valid option, but it's not what the client is asking for.
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@batman The client may have an older system that they want to keep around for purposes that's near death, so moving it might make sense.
Compared to backing it up and having to go to disk to pull files or whatever.
So many unknowns about this topic to dig much further.
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@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@Obsolesce said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@IRJ said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
Is there any real reason for this? OP doesn't mention it either
IDK, I thought the same thing as well, but I didn't not want to provide a potentially useful answer.
When the objective or goal itself is useless, any answer you feel is useful would then default to useless anyways.
So, the only potentially useful answer would be to get the OP to re-evaluate the situation and perhaps approach it differently altogether.My response is to get more detail from @CCWTech as to the reason the client wants this. I don't know why the client wants to do this as it's not explained anywhere in this topic.
@CCWTech why just post and disappear? Give us some more details.
Sorry, I've been crazy busy. He doesn't want to have to reinstall programs. I think the F12 boot option may work the best. As long as the hardware isn't too different and it will actually boot.
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@CCWTech said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@Obsolesce said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@IRJ said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
Is there any real reason for this? OP doesn't mention it either
IDK, I thought the same thing as well, but I didn't not want to provide a potentially useful answer.
When the objective or goal itself is useless, any answer you feel is useful would then default to useless anyways.
So, the only potentially useful answer would be to get the OP to re-evaluate the situation and perhaps approach it differently altogether.My response is to get more detail from @CCWTech as to the reason the client wants this. I don't know why the client wants to do this as it's not explained anywhere in this topic.
@CCWTech why just post and disappear? Give us some more details.
Sorry, I've been crazy busy. He doesn't want to have to reinstall programs. I think the F12 boot option may work the best. As long as the hardware isn't too different and it will actually boot.
Don't forget you would need to purchase an additional license.
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@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@CCWTech said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@Obsolesce said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@IRJ said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
Is there any real reason for this? OP doesn't mention it either
IDK, I thought the same thing as well, but I didn't not want to provide a potentially useful answer.
When the objective or goal itself is useless, any answer you feel is useful would then default to useless anyways.
So, the only potentially useful answer would be to get the OP to re-evaluate the situation and perhaps approach it differently altogether.My response is to get more detail from @CCWTech as to the reason the client wants this. I don't know why the client wants to do this as it's not explained anywhere in this topic.
@CCWTech why just post and disappear? Give us some more details.
Sorry, I've been crazy busy. He doesn't want to have to reinstall programs. I think the F12 boot option may work the best. As long as the hardware isn't too different and it will actually boot.
Don't forget you would need to purchase an additional license.
Yeah... because if you don't, these guys will kick in your door and drag you away in the night to be held at an ICE detention center...
They're always watching you, counting your MS licenses, pedantically enforcing every last syllable...
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@RojoLoco Finally you get it!
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@DustinB3403 said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@RojoLoco Finally you get it!
You know they will take your baby away if you don't keep pedantically reminding everyone on every thread of the minutia of the agreement.
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Dual booting is a management nightmare. How often is the secondary OS updated? Who the fuck knows? When the user finally uses the secondary drive, they have to spend 2 hours installing updates.
It makes no sense from a management or productivity standpoint for the user.
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@IRJ said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
Dual booting is a management nightmare. How often is the secondary OS updated? Who the fuck knows? When the user finally uses the secondary drive, they have to spend 2 hours installing updates.
It makes no sense from a management or productivity standpoint for the user.
From an msp standpoint it makes a ton of sense for billable hours.
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@IRJ said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
Dual booting is a management nightmare. How often is the secondary OS updated? Who the fuck knows? When the user finally uses the secondary drive, they have to spend 2 hours installing updates.
It makes no sense from a management or productivity standpoint for the user.
Two opportunity to get a BSOD after a update.
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@black3dynamite said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
@IRJ said in Joining 2 Windows 10 Machines:
Dual booting is a management nightmare. How often is the secondary OS updated? Who the fuck knows? When the user finally uses the secondary drive, they have to spend 2 hours installing updates.
It makes no sense from a management or productivity standpoint for the user.
Two opportunity to get a BSOD after a update.
:crazy_face:But at least you don't have to update them together.
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In fact, dual booting makes it impossible to update at the same time!
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If you're going to dual boot, from the same drive, you'll need to partition it and install the 'new' OS on the second partition... or maybe restore to dissimilar hardware from backup.
Then you'll have to fluff about with the Boot tab in MSconfig.
You might already know all of this, but I didn't see it in my scan of the thread.
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4 days and the OP hasn't responded. hmmm...