F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems No, Windows activation is not linked to your motherboard. It depends on the product key and licensing agreement.

No, Windows activation is not linked to your motherboard. It depends on the product key and licensing agreement.

No, Windows activation is not linked to your motherboard. It depends on the product key and licensing agreement.

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Flakxyyy
Junior Member
18
08-19-2016, 01:20 PM
#1
You're likely removing the original Windows installation when replacing the hardware. That replacement unit would be responsible for disabling or removing the Windows activation key.
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Flakxyyy
08-19-2016, 01:20 PM #1

You're likely removing the original Windows installation when replacing the hardware. That replacement unit would be responsible for disabling or removing the Windows activation key.

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Tim9810
Member
231
08-20-2016, 11:20 PM
#2
It seems Windows activation can be tricky, but I've managed to get OEM keys working smoothly across different system changes and reinstalls. Some people face problems when swapping just one part, leading to changes in the system ID.
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Tim9810
08-20-2016, 11:20 PM #2

It seems Windows activation can be tricky, but I've managed to get OEM keys working smoothly across different system changes and reinstalls. Some people face problems when swapping just one part, leading to changes in the system ID.

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J0ebyron
Member
225
08-26-2016, 12:59 PM
#3
Affordable options work too. Complete versions with connected accounts seem transferable and retrievable. Uncertain about that, since I haven’t paid for a Microsoft Store purchase before.
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J0ebyron
08-26-2016, 12:59 PM #3

Affordable options work too. Complete versions with connected accounts seem transferable and retrievable. Uncertain about that, since I haven’t paid for a Microsoft Store purchase before.

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Scrawnypwner
Junior Member
39
09-02-2016, 02:32 AM
#4
It might be only the drive, or possibly more; I’m assuming it’s just the drive itself.
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Scrawnypwner
09-02-2016, 02:32 AM #4

It might be only the drive, or possibly more; I’m assuming it’s just the drive itself.

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Sophie_Louisee
Junior Member
37
09-02-2016, 08:39 AM
#5
Yes, OEM refers to an Original Equipment Manufacturer, which typically involves products designed for specific computers or systems.
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Sophie_Louisee
09-02-2016, 08:39 AM #5

Yes, OEM refers to an Original Equipment Manufacturer, which typically involves products designed for specific computers or systems.

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ausimus
Member
68
09-02-2016, 12:47 PM
#6
It's a combination of all parts, changing over time, and MS has consistently been unclear about it. On a retail license, it's meant to support regular upgrades—like swapping your SSD, GPU, or motherboard while keeping the rest unchanged should keep it working—but not if you replace everything at once. You could update some components now and others later, and it would still function.
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ausimus
09-02-2016, 12:47 PM #6

It's a combination of all parts, changing over time, and MS has consistently been unclear about it. On a retail license, it's meant to support regular upgrades—like swapping your SSD, GPU, or motherboard while keeping the rest unchanged should keep it working—but not if you replace everything at once. You could update some components now and others later, and it would still function.

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seomilk77
Member
181
09-02-2016, 08:18 PM
#7
The activation is connected to the board, but only the board itself. This allows you to change components like GPUs and CPUs while keeping activation active. However, once the operating system moves to a different board, the issue arises. The problem stems from the OS writing information to the board's BIOS as a "key," which prevents activation during POST. Although Microsoft is very effective at handling activations, this can cause trouble if you switch boards. Re-activating it should work if you change the board, as newer OS versions do this differently. Earlier versions like XP handled it another way, but most recent ones follow the same process.
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seomilk77
09-02-2016, 08:18 PM #7

The activation is connected to the board, but only the board itself. This allows you to change components like GPUs and CPUs while keeping activation active. However, once the operating system moves to a different board, the issue arises. The problem stems from the OS writing information to the board's BIOS as a "key," which prevents activation during POST. Although Microsoft is very effective at handling activations, this can cause trouble if you switch boards. Re-activating it should work if you change the board, as newer OS versions do this differently. Earlier versions like XP handled it another way, but most recent ones follow the same process.

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Sithaustin9
Junior Member
17
09-02-2016, 10:48 PM
#8
It's not the drive itself. The issue seems to lie with the board and maybe other factors mentioned by others.
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Sithaustin9
09-02-2016, 10:48 PM #8

It's not the drive itself. The issue seems to lie with the board and maybe other factors mentioned by others.

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Sh2dow_K1LL3R
Junior Member
17
09-04-2016, 12:26 PM
#9
It seems OEM keys aren't permanently attached to the motherboard; instead, they lose the capacity to re-register elsewhere. The outcome remains unchanged—you can't relocate them, though it likely contributes to the issue.
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Sh2dow_K1LL3R
09-04-2016, 12:26 PM #9

It seems OEM keys aren't permanently attached to the motherboard; instead, they lose the capacity to re-register elsewhere. The outcome remains unchanged—you can't relocate them, though it likely contributes to the issue.

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JamesHond7
Posting Freak
838
09-26-2016, 07:36 AM
#10
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JamesHond7
09-26-2016, 07:36 AM #10