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OEM or Retail

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alaska56

New Member
Joined
Jul 29, 2004
I am in the process of building a new system.

Newegg is selling windows xp pro OEM version for 138.00

That seems like a great price.

I have been debating on getting the retail or oem version can anyone help me out and decide if its worth the extra 100+ for the retail version.

BTW I am not totaly loaded with money but would spend the extra if I belived that I would be getting reasonalbe additional value with the retail pack.


Thanks

Alaska56...
 
there is no added value with the retail pack. it is the same version as the OEM. You cannot buy the OEM version by itself though....it must be purchased in combination with a new piece of hardware. i.e. motherboard, processor etc.

Cheers!!
 
1. Like JezterVA mentioned, OEM versions must be sold with a piece of hardware (normally a MB or HDD, if not an entire PC, although MS has greatly relaxed the hardware criteria for WinXP) and are permanently bound to the first PC on which they are installed. An OEM license, once installed, is not legally transferable to another computer under any circumstances. This is the best reason to avoid OEM versions; if the PC dies or is otherwise disposed of (even stolen), you cannot re-use your OEM license on a new PC.

2. MS provides no support for OEM versions. If you have any problems that require outside assistance, your only recourse is to contact the vendor of the OEM license. This would include such issues as a lost Product Key or replacing damaged installation media (MS does make allowances for those instances when you can prove that the OEM has gone out of business). This doesn't mean that you can't download patches and service packs from MS...just no free live or email support for problems with the OS.

3. An OEM CD cannot perform an upgrade, as it was designed to be installed only upon an empty HDD.

4. If the OEM CD was designed by a specific manufacturer, such as eMachines, Sony, HP, Compaq, etc., it will most likely only install on the same brand of PC, as an additional anti-piracy feature. Further, such CDs are severely customized to contain only the minimum of device drivers, and a lot of extra nonsense, that the manufacturer feels necessary for the specific model of PC for which the CD was designed. The "generic" OEM CDs, such as are sold to small systems builders, don't have this particular problem though, and are pretty much the same as their retail counterparts.
 
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