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April 03, 2001 12:00 AM

Clearing Up Some Windows XP Confusion

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #20562
Rating: (6)

With the release last week of a near feature-complete Windows XP Beta 2, a number of questions have cropped up, so I thought I'd clear up some of the more common misconceptions about this OS. In the days since the release, Microsoft has run into a bit of controversy surrounding the deployment of Beta 2. Microsoft Developer Network (MSDN) Universal and Professional subscribers will get Beta 2 on CD-ROM in early May, when the May CD-ROM shipment arrives. TechNet subscribers will also see Beta 2 in that product's May shipment. The delay, in both cases, involves Windows XP's controversial Product Activation feature, as each MSDN and TechNet subscriber will receive a unique Product ID with which to install Beta 2.

Preview Program Confusion
Microsoft announced a Windows XP Preview Program last month, and the day that Beta 2 was released, the company opened up the program to customers. Unfortunately, this program was launched with much confusion and controversy: For $9.95, users can get download access to the Release Candidate 1 (RC1) and RC2 builds of Windows XP Pro, when they are released this summer. An additional $10 gets you RC1 on CD-ROM. But the first 20,000 people that signed up for the program were also promised access to Beta 2 on CD-ROM. But when people began signing up for this program, the order form said that Beta 2 would be provided as a download as well—because of a typo on the Web site. Many people signed up expecting to get download access to Beta 2.

Needless to say, they were disappointed. In the days following the release of Windows XP Beta 2, frustrated Preview Program customers lurked in the program's newsgroup, accusing Microsoft of deception and worse. In the end, Microsoft admitted that it had made an honest mistake and worked to clarify the situation. The first 20,000 sign-ups will get Beta 2 on CD-ROM in the second half of April. And everyone else will get RC1 and RC2, as promised, this summer when Microsoft makes those releases available.

Another source of confusion is Windows XP's system requirements. Microsoft is specifying a Pentium II 233 with 64MB of RAM as the minimum, while recommending a Pentium II 300 with 128MB to get the full Windows XP experience. I think the company's recommended configuration is a more realistic minimum, and I recommend more than 128MB of RAM for acceptable performance. Like any version of Windows NT, Windows XP is RAM hungry and will eat whatever you throw at it. And, like previous releases, the amount of RAM is more important than the processor version: I'd choose a Pentium II 400 with 256MB of RAM over a Pentium 4 with 64MB of RAM any day.

Product Activation
But perhaps the most controversial and misunderstood feature in Windows XP is Product Activation. I should note up front that Product Activation will be included only in the retail versions of Windows XP and those copies that come preinstalled with new PCs: Volume licensees need not deal with this issue. In short, Product Activation ensures that "casual copiers"—who might buy one copy of Windows but install it on two or more PCs—don't pirate Windows XP. It works by requiring you to "activate" your copy of Windows over the Internet or by phone. Product Activation isn't the same thing as registration—which is still optional—although it's similar in that it ties a single copy of Windows to a single entity, in this case, a PC. Here's how Product Activation works: The first time you install Windows XP with your Product ID (CD key), you're prompted to activate it. If you choose not to activate it, Windows XP will stop booting in 14 days, although you will be reminded to activate it before then. However you activate Windows XP, the system generates a unique key based on the Product ID you entered and an unknown algorithm that polls the hardware installed on your system. If you attempt to use that Product ID later to install Windows XP on a different system, activation will fail.

The controversy surrounds this secret algorithm: People are concerned that they will upgrade their hard disk or motherboard and then reinstall Windows XP, which will then not allow activation because the system might be seen as a different PC. But I've tested this scenario, and it's really not that big a deal: If electronic activation fails, you can call Microsoft toll free, explain the upgrade, and have your system re-activated. Once that happens, future electronic activations on that system will work again.

Unless you're pirating Microsoft software, Product Activation probably won't cause you problems—although I think Microsoft could allay most complaints by simply providing two keys per copy of Windows XP, allowing users to install the OS on two systems. And Product Activation is here to stay: Office XP and Visio 2002 will also include this feature, and it's safe to say that future Microsoft products will include it as well.

If you're interested in Windows XP Beta 2, please visit the SuperSite for Windows, which has extensive coverage of this release.

You can find out more about the Windows XP Preview Program on the Microsoft Web site.

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Comments
  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Aug 01, 2005

    it's hard to believe that MS can exercise such absolute control over people's use of their purchases in their own home. i installed windows xp on a computer and put a lot of files on it and then i couldn't access the files after the activation period. i phoned Ms but as usual spent ages having to listen to the kind of music i hate on my home phone and was then immediately cut off on getting through. i paid £1000 for my computer and recently the motherboard went and i had to rebuilt the computer. when i talked on the phone i got a lot of idiotic incomprehensible techno bureaucracy. i was told i couldn't change my hard drive - without having to buy another operating system, the same one again.

    if writers assumed the same powers we wouldn't be able to loan a book or buy one second-hand.

    win xp only proves that people who are greedy get greedier and greedier. many people are getting sick of the internet/computers because they fall prey to those who use their programming skills to put big sums of money on their telephone bills for **** and gambling which they despise yet have to pay for. they fall prey to scaremongering software producers who exploit them by deceitful methods to buy more and more anti virus software.

    the windows XP software doesn't give you the right to use the operating system for any set period. if your hardware goes down your licence 'dies with it' - that's what they told me on the phone.

    allowing MS to speak to you in your own home is to invite the worst kind of manners from people in various places, seemingly. the IT world opens doors - it opens doors to people who want to abuse you in your own home with accusations. i can hardly believe that i've spend over £2000 on comuters/software/upgrades in the past two years and still am branded by microsoft.

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jan 16, 2005

    LOL reading some of these things is funny. Like the guy who said there will be a revolution. LOL let me get my gun! Down with Bill Gates!

  • Richard
    8 years ago
    May 14, 2004

    Question:
    How can one overcome the Windows Product Activation (WPA)woes?

    Answer:
    Linux
    Open source-GPL

    The masses have defined the answer as always.

    Those who have not realized a simple working concept, fell asleep in history class.

  • George Poth
    10 years ago
    Dec 15, 2002

    I have installed XP Pro over Win98 with the choice of a new installation. Is this the same as if I did an installation of XP on a new disk? I don't want to have anything on my disk which comes from Win98. If not, how do I format my disk with XP Pro installed? Do I have to reactivate again? If yes, could this cause trouble (Micro$oft thinking I have copied?)

  • Eugene Terrell
    11 years ago
    Aug 26, 2001

    I downloaded Windows XP RC2, but could not install for testing. The problem was that there was no data in the
    "CONTROLS.MAN" file in the I386 Directory. So when this file was parsed during the install process, the installation
    failed for that reason. The irony is that, I have not found a workaround, and I contacted Microsoft for Help but have not received any feedback.

    Nevertheless, I believe that this problem is assocaited with Windows Product Activation (WPA). However, like INTEL
    and its serial number signature for their CPU's, this is clearly an Invasion of Pravicy and a Deprivation of Individual Rights. Because now, every individual is required
    to have an Internet Connection on every Computer that uses
    Microsoft's Software. And while currently, there no additional cost associated with connecting multiple PCs using a Dial-Up connection. However, there are additional costs for connecting multiple PCs for all other types of Internet Connections. And with the implemention of the IPv6
    specification...Well??? Just tell the consumer to get ready,
    because the promise is that, each computer or node will require an Individual connection even for the Dial-Up.

    "Before the Monkey flips the switch, he asks: What should I expect this time?"

    Concerned Consumer

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