Windows 7 X64 Dell Oem

3/27/2018
Windows 7 X64 Dell Oem Rating: 3,5/5 8956votes

Here you can download Dell Windows 7 Ultimate OEM (Genuine) SP1 ISO Image (free). This is DVD bootable ISO for Dell Genuine Windows 7 Ultimate for 32 Bit/64 Bit. As Dell doesn't provide OEM disk now I don't have any disk left to install win 7 pro. Win 7 Pro 64bit Dell OEM iso. Templates Acco Pdf Template. I want link Dell windows 7 64 bit.

Windows 7 X64 Torrent

I have a windows 7 Dell OEM disk for my XPS15 running Home Premium x64. My question is this: a friend of mine also purchased an XPS 15z running the same OS from dell at about the same time. Can he use my disk on his machine or is it machine specific?

Windows 7 64 Bit Dell Oem Torrent

Is the disk tied to my machine or is it generic and will look for his motherboard and activate accordingly. To be clear.we both have legitimate licenses for windows 7 Home premium x64 supplied with our dell machines, i'm simply trying to ascertain if there is any problem using the same OEM disk to reinstall windows on both.

There is nothing wrong with it, and I believe that is what Jesse was trying to say. The Dell disks do a BIOS check to make sure the computer is a Dell. If it is not a Dell, it will not allow you to install it. If it is a Dell, it will proceed with the installation. Dell disks have a generic self/auto-activating product key embedded in the disk (not the BIOS), usually doing away with the need to manually enter the product key from the sticker on the side of the computer and activate. Although my experience says it will still ask for the key (for Windows 7). AS LONG AS the key is for the same version you just installed, there is no reason it wouldn't work to activate.

The COA is your actual license to use the software, regardless of the key used to activate it. For example, if you used a Dell Windows 7 Professional DVD to install on a machine with a Dell Windows 7 Home Premium Product Key, activation will fail, as the versions do not match. However, if the target computer has a Professional Product Key, then it should activate just fine. (Just a sidenote. 32-bit and 64-bit keys are interchangeable.) What Jesse was trying to say was that the following scenario is NOT allowed and carries substantial fines if caught: You have a new XPS15z that came with Windows 7 Home Premium, and you want to install with that disk on, say, an older Inspiron 1720 that came with Windows Vista. Half Life 2 Deathmatch Patch 2011.

Because the 1720 is a Dell, the BIOS check will allow the installation, and if the auto/self-activating key works like it should, then you would have just installed Windows 7 on another system that does not have a key. THIS is not allowed. Yes.this makes sense now. This is what I had been expecting, since we both have Dells purchased around the same time and both have valid Windows 7 x64 Home Premium COAs/Keys I guessed we could use the same OEM disk. I was just trying to make sure we wouldn't run into problems with activation on his machine i.e. That the disk was specific to me.

I asked the question because when I used it on my machine I was never asked for the Key and it activated automatically (I guess for the reason you have mentioned theflash1932). Either way, he has just requested his own OS disk (which in my opinion should be packaged with all machines anyway) so he can use that when it arrives. We were just trying to avoid the delay in waiting. Even if it activates automatically, as the COA is your license/right to use the software, the key actually used to activate is not important. In theory, it is possible that if you retreived the product key used activate two machines built at the factory, that both may have been activated with the same generic keys. With auto-activation, it is easy to misuse this feature and install it on a system without a valid COA/license key.