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There are only a few dollars difference if you buy a key from URCDKey. Personally I would get Pro.
Win 11 Home OEM $26.94 usd currently
Win 11 Pro OEM $29.51 usd currently
Hey Janus!! Thanks good to knowFor today's computers it is much less of an issue than it was in the days of single and dual core processors
There isn't going to be a difference really. Pro offers more things, but as Janus said, with today's systems... it won't make much of a difference. And, it's not like those things are all running/taking up resources.
Thanks I hadn’t seen this one yet.
I agree with the reasoning for go with Pro. I have always gone Pro with my windows license over the years, just because of the overall completeness of "features" that come with it.Pro has one good advantage. When you install a fresh OS, then you can still use a local user's account. Home version forces you to use MS account which links everything to that account.
Btw. I feel like URCDKey or other cheap key stores are not selling fully legal licenses. I mean you only get a key which can be activated and it's fine as it usually works and can be signed to your MS account. Then MS won't make problems. However they are using only keys available in multi-license business packs (infinite group activations), or specific Office licenses not available in retail. It suggests they buy multi-pack volume licenses from MS and sell keys separately. It's just impossible to sell MS keys legally for 10% of their official price.
I have several computers with Windows 10 and 11. None of them were set up with a Microsoft account.Pro has one good advantage. When you install a fresh OS, then you can still use a local user's account. Home version forces you to use MS account which links everything to that account.
Btw. I feel like URCDKey or other cheap key stores are not selling fully legal licenses. I mean you only get a key which can be activated and it's fine as it usually works and can be signed to your MS account. Then MS won't make problems. However they are using only keys available in multi-license business packs (infinite group activations), or specific Office licenses not available in retail. It suggests they buy multi-pack volume licenses from MS and sell keys separately. It's just impossible to sell MS keys legally for 10% of their official price.
Pro has one good advantage. When you install a fresh OS, then you can still use a local user's account. Home version forces you to use MS account which links everything to that account.
Btw. I feel like URCDKey or other cheap key stores are not selling fully legal licenses. I mean you only get a key which can be activated and it's fine as it usually works and can be signed to your MS account. Then MS won't make problems. However they are using only keys available in multi-license business packs (infinite group activations), or specific Office licenses not available in retail. It suggests they buy multi-pack volume licenses from MS and sell keys separately. It's just impossible to sell MS keys legally for 10% of their official price.
I don't care much about that too.I could care less about the morality of "cheating" multi-billion dollar corporations out of an extra forty or fifty bucks... especially when that corporation is named MICROSOFT. (They've already got their money from me over the years.)
Seems clear... but problems will start when the license will be locked on the MS servers, and you ask MS support for help. Then they will ask you for the invoice, even though the key is registered on your MS account, and if the seller is not a registered partner then good luck fighting with them for your "legal" license and a new product key.As far as "legality" goes... You're buying what's, essentially, a single-activation key online. Microsoft is accepting the key, and if it's saved to your account, Microsoft is verifying that you're the owner of the license. That meets pretty much every definition of "legal."
They are selling mainly MSDN volume licenses (read as business lecenses available only to registered companies) as a single licenses. Business licenses are impossible to be purchased in retail. I work in this stuff for nearly 20 years, including MS license sales, so I know in what prices can be bought MS licenses. When there is a promo price for boxed Office license, then the store gets about 20-25%. Typically it's ~10%.Even if these sites (and, to be clear, these sites don't actually sell keys... it's just a marketplace for other people to sell keys on these sites) are splitting up multi-volume licenses... even THAT would not be "illegal". It would only be a violation of Microsoft's TOS... (which... if they're not enforcing, since they could easily tell if a license came from a multi-pack or not... is kinda their fault).
I'd be much more concerned about the credit card theft angle...
Which leads us to... this is all theoretical internet gossip and I don't actually believe ANY of it.
Corporate apologists and internet crackpots just trying to make up excuses for how these sites can sell things so cheaply when the companies themselves charge so much (unless there's a sale... which kinda proves they don't HAVE to sell them for so much). Another hole in the theory is that these sites also sell heavily discounted games which absolutely do NOT have any kind of multi-volume business license structure.
No... Far more likely is that people are simply buying the licenses wholesale like any store would do, but selling them far cheaper than the suggested retail price and making their profit off of volume instead of markup.
As an example of this... if you go on Good Morning America's website... (or whatever network show you can think of) a LOT of them have started to sell Office 360 licenses.
I guess they discovered it's actually not a bad idea.
I don't care much about that too.
Seems clear... but problems will start when the license will be locked on the MS servers, and you ask MS support for help. Then they will ask you for the invoice, even though the key is registered on your MS account, and if the seller is not a registered partner then good luck fighting with them for your "legal" license and a new product key.
They are selling mainly MSDN volume licenses (read as business lecenses available only to registered companies) as a single licenses. Business licenses are impossible to be purchased in retail. I work in this stuff for nearly 20 years, including MS license sales, so I know in what prices can be bought MS licenses. When there is a promo price for boxed Office license, then the store gets about 20-25%. Typically it's ~10%.
What I said in this thread is nothing from the web. I just noticed that something isn't right and said that you can expect problems in the future. It doesn't mean it will happen and I also said, I have a license from a "cheap key store" too, so I'm aware of the possible problems. In the worst case, the price I paid was low enough that I can live with that, even if the license will be locked in some time.
Office 365 is something different. It's impossible to be purchased from an illegal source as every key is going through MS sales and activation department and is signed to your account. The exception are O365 cards that you can buy in stores. It still has to be activated and signed to your MS account.
Cheap key stores are not selling O365 licenses. They are selling the whole accounts with already activated O365 and you can't change user's ID. They send you ID and password so you can change it after the purchase.
Read the product description and tell me it's not fishy ->"Please change the PW once you get it. Please remember you can't change the ID of the account."Buy MS Office 365 Account Global 1 Device at vip-urcdkey.com
MS Office 365 Account Global 1 Device is on sale on vip-urcdkey.com, instant delivery via email, quality service, shopping at vip-urcdkey.com with no worries.m.vip-urcdkey.com
Products that are not subscriptions are activated in the old way, and have different activation rules.