F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Windows 10 activation codes function consistently across various devices.

Windows 10 activation codes function consistently across various devices.

Windows 10 activation codes function consistently across various devices.

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M
MadTheScrub
Junior Member
6
04-09-2016, 04:01 AM
#1
Everyone else was updating their systems to Windows 10. On my main machine I ran the Windows 10 insider builds, while my laptop stayed with Windows 8.1. My desktop now uses Windows 10 Pro, everything is activated, and the insider builds remain active as usual. On my laptop, I upgraded for the free upgrade and it worked fine. All set, listed as Windows 10 Pro, and the insider build status is off since it wasn’t an insider version before. I prefer backing up my CD keys because I only had digital copies initially, and I just moved them to a new PC without any problems. I was saving my insider build PC and the laptop’s CD key files, and both methods gave the same keys. Using a magic jelly bean they generated identical keys, while the VBS script method produced keys that matched but differed from the one provided by magic jelly bean. Probably just a matter of key location or something similar. Right now I’m puzzled—why would they be exactly the same? I don’t want to assume anything without proof. It’s strange not to worry about it unless someone checks across devices, especially outside the free upgrade window. No one else should be able to verify if the keys match on their machines. I’ve searched online but couldn’t find any answers.
M
MadTheScrub
04-09-2016, 04:01 AM #1

Everyone else was updating their systems to Windows 10. On my main machine I ran the Windows 10 insider builds, while my laptop stayed with Windows 8.1. My desktop now uses Windows 10 Pro, everything is activated, and the insider builds remain active as usual. On my laptop, I upgraded for the free upgrade and it worked fine. All set, listed as Windows 10 Pro, and the insider build status is off since it wasn’t an insider version before. I prefer backing up my CD keys because I only had digital copies initially, and I just moved them to a new PC without any problems. I was saving my insider build PC and the laptop’s CD key files, and both methods gave the same keys. Using a magic jelly bean they generated identical keys, while the VBS script method produced keys that matched but differed from the one provided by magic jelly bean. Probably just a matter of key location or something similar. Right now I’m puzzled—why would they be exactly the same? I don’t want to assume anything without proof. It’s strange not to worry about it unless someone checks across devices, especially outside the free upgrade window. No one else should be able to verify if the keys match on their machines. I’ve searched online but couldn’t find any answers.

K
kipper101587
Member
57
04-10-2016, 05:09 PM
#2
I’ll note that the Product IDs vary here. This refers to the ID itself, not the actual CD or product key.
K
kipper101587
04-10-2016, 05:09 PM #2

I’ll note that the Product IDs vary here. This refers to the ID itself, not the actual CD or product key.

M
Minegus_Dub
Member
172
04-11-2016, 01:40 AM
#3
Ms is handling the activation caching; complete the upgrade first—it activates—after which you can perform a fresh installation using the Windows 10 10240 CD key.
M
Minegus_Dub
04-11-2016, 01:40 AM #3

Ms is handling the activation caching; complete the upgrade first—it activates—after which you can perform a fresh installation using the Windows 10 10240 CD key.

T
TheMrJokerJ
Member
118
04-12-2016, 01:01 PM
#4
I'm expecting every CD key to use the 10240 install CD key.
T
TheMrJokerJ
04-12-2016, 01:01 PM #4

I'm expecting every CD key to use the 10240 install CD key.

T
TheNamesAidan
Member
194
04-12-2016, 11:07 PM
#5
You can turn on Windows 7 using the loader... upgrade to version 10... allow it to start, then perform a clean installation with the 10240 key for a fully activated Windows 10 experience.
T
TheNamesAidan
04-12-2016, 11:07 PM #5

You can turn on Windows 7 using the loader... upgrade to version 10... allow it to start, then perform a clean installation with the 10240 key for a fully activated Windows 10 experience.

L
legoninja365
Member
59
04-13-2016, 09:57 PM
#6
They’re likely linking the free upgrade to the device’s hardware or software, using caching to support it.
L
legoninja365
04-13-2016, 09:57 PM #6

They’re likely linking the free upgrade to the device’s hardware or software, using caching to support it.

T
TrueBit
Senior Member
590
04-13-2016, 10:47 PM
#7
You might launch a CMD prompt and execute slmgr /dlv to check for variations in the values. I believe they are authentic keys, so there should be no concern.
T
TrueBit
04-13-2016, 10:47 PM #7

You might launch a CMD prompt and execute slmgr /dlv to check for variations in the values. I believe they are authentic keys, so there should be no concern.

R
rdk625
Junior Member
1
04-13-2016, 11:41 PM
#8
yea
R
rdk625
04-13-2016, 11:41 PM #8

yea

I
iUseBakerSorry
Junior Member
15
04-14-2016, 04:32 AM
#9
In theory yes... you could redo the upgrade if you didn’t want to call the support team.
I
iUseBakerSorry
04-14-2016, 04:32 AM #9

In theory yes... you could redo the upgrade if you didn’t want to call the support team.

N
nugrr
Member
64
04-16-2016, 05:16 PM
#10
Only once a year. Once it ends, things get tough.
N
nugrr
04-16-2016, 05:16 PM #10

Only once a year. Once it ends, things get tough.

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