Consider upgrading your components versus buying a new operating system.
Consider upgrading your components versus buying a new operating system.
Hello, for the hardware upgrade you're doing on your brother's PC, you won't need to buy a new Windows license. Since the original copy was an OEM product, it should work fine with the replacement motherboard. Just make sure the BIOS settings match what came with the board.
Checking if it's Windows 8.1 or not. If it's version 7, then it is.
You don't need to buy a new copy of Windows. Claiming otherwise just means you're looking at Microsoft's perspective, trying to push another purchase since they can't adapt to hardware changes. If your new motherboard causes activation issues, use the "Activate over the Phone" option and explain the swap—Microsoft will provide a key. Most often people are told to reinstall Windows because of driver problems. Windows 7 PNP handles hardware changes well as long as you have the right drivers. Generally, no major setup is needed to get basic functions working again.
Read this after I shared it—I found the piece lacking real insight. It mostly repeats “yes, you have to because you just do and that’s how it is.” Not very solid. The only post that stood out was all caps. As long as you remove board-specific drivers and/or software (like ASUS Utility Suite or Gigabytes EasyTune), plus audio drivers, you should be okay. Windows will recognize the built-in chipset and use standard drivers until you install the correct ones for your hardware. Upgrading those drivers after installation is usually all you need.
The label doesn't indicate which manufacturer created it. It just mentions something like "Genuin Windows..." and suggests you don't need to purchase a new one. Only officially branded OEMs are associated with the motherboard. Branding means the company's name appears on the sticker. I'm unsure how performance prebuilds coordinate with their OEM versions. Larger brands (HP, Dell, etc.) typically include branding.