Subject: Well...
Author:
Posted on: 2010-03-13 17:50:00 UTC

Windows activation is a remarkably complicated system, as they want to allow someone to reinstall the same computer multiple times, but not allow someone to install the same copy of Windows on multiple computers. The way they do this is they get several somewhat unique numbers to your system (CPU serial number, network adapter's MAC address, and so on), then mathematically combine them into a number that's unique to your computer, but doesn't mean anything else. Then they send that number and the Windows CD key to Microsoft's magic master servers, which look up that key, and make sure it hasn't already been used, or that it has been used for the same computer only. The server sends the OK, the computer finishes the install, and everything works.

Obviously, it's rather straightforward for Microsoft to set up CD keys that will work for a given number of computers other than one, or CD keys that will work for any number of computers but make a note to a central account somewhere, or so on.

My one concern would be whether the disk is good for an install and then two reinstalls, or whether it's good for running three systems concurrently. That would definitely be something worth checking up on before you install it on the second box.

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