In fact, Microsoft's attitude on the Vista activation is very loose, if not before some organizations have gone too far-unauthorized installation of Vista activation server, Microsoft is even willing to "quietly" provide users with the long-term use of vista-free way.
In fact, the Vista activation deadline can be extended indefinitely by simply changing one key value from 0 to 1 in the Vista registry-Microsoft even provides documentation on its TechNet website.
However, some unscrupulous PC sellers may use this "loophole" to deceive consumers, claiming to provide genuine Vista activation-and users will not find it for at least a few months or even a year.
Of course, relative to the current network of the popular Vista crack way, this "legitimate" approach needs to enter the registry to modify, and may need to be activated several times, and is not convenient, not suitable for ordinary users to use, the registry more understanding of users can try.
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To see how the registry is modified
How to run Vista legally without activation ... for in least a year
Published March 17th, 2007 in Uncategorized.
Brian Livingston has a new trick:
Microsoft has built into Vista a function that allows anyone to extend the operating system ' s activation deadline not just Three times, the But many times. The same one-line command that postpones Vista's activation deadline to, can be used a indefinite number of times By the changing a Registry key from 0 to 1.
This isn ' t a hacker exploit. It doesn ' t require any tools or utilities whatsoever. Microsoft even documented the Registry key, although obtusely, on its Technet Site.
But dishonest PC sellers could use the procedure to install thousands of copies of Vista and sell them to unsuspecting con Sumers or businesses as legitimately activated copies. This would certainly violate the Vista EULA, but consumers might not realize this until the PCs they bought started demand ing Activation-and failing-months or years later.
The following describes the Registry key that ' s involved.
Step 1. While running a copy of Windows Vista this hasn ' t yet been activated, click the Start button, type regedit into the Search box, then press Enter to launch the Registry Editor.
Step 2. Explore down to the following Registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE \ SOFTWARE \ Microsoft \ Windows NT \ currentversion \ SL
Step 3. Right-click the Registry key named SkipRearm and click Edit. The default is a Dword (a double word or 4 bytes) with a hex value of 00000000. Change this value to any positive integers, such as 00000001, save the change, and close the Registry Editor.
Step 4. Start a command prompt with administrative rights. The fastest way to the "Start button", enter CMD in the Search box, then press Ctrl+shift+enter. If you are asked for a network username and password, provide the ones this log into your domain. You are asked to approve a User account, prompt and to provide a administrator password.
Step 5. Type one of the following two commands and press Enter:
Slmgr-rearm
Or
rundll32 Slc.dll,slrearmwindows
Either command uses Vista ' s built-in Software Licensing Manager (SLMGR) to push the activation deadline Er the command is run. Changing SkipRearm from 0 to 1 allows SLMGR to does this a indefinite number of times. Running either command initializes the value of SkipRearm back to 0.
Step 6. Reboot the PC to make the postponement take effect. You can open a command prompt and run the command slmgr-xpr to the Vista ' new expiration. Date and time.
Step 7. To extend the activation deadline of Vista indefinitely, repeat steps 1 through 6 as necessary
http://newbeta.org/2007/03/17/how-to-run-vista-legally-without-activation-for-at-least-a-year/