The justifiable reason is that it's not part of the license agreement.
I don;t agree with it but am explaining that this is the case.
OEM licenses are cheap for a reason. If you want to be transferring, you need a 'Fully Packaged Product' as the boys at MS say.
I wasn't discussing your philosophy.
I'm dealing in facts. An OEM edition, installed on anything other than a new PC, does not necessarily give the end result of a legal OS.
They do need to clarify what new hardware would allow it to become legit but they don;t know themselves and that comes pretty much from the top of the UK MS tree.
You don;t need to be registered.
If you're building complete systems from scratch and providing the customer with an OEM licensed edition of the OS, that's fine and perfectly legal.
I do agree that it's silly.
I really think that OEM licenses should only be available to OEM certified organisations. To be fair, it's even a minefield for me and I'm supposed to have expertise in this field and as I said earlier, it's a minefield for MS as even their top guys don't know which hardware can constitute a 'new PC'.
I think we should resurrect this thread in some way... either strip irrelevant posts out of this one, or un-stickify it and create a new one?
I was going to recommend the E5200 as a kick-ass value CPU. That's all.
I preferred your old sig :(
How's work going Mark? Still a pleasure to work with those devs?
I am indeed happy now that the world is ending soon anyway.
Are you sure you haven't overlooked the beverage and snack ordering function of the API?
(cheer)