This is kinda complex. I build my own computers and have for some time now. I usually put dual boots on them for insurance of access.
My most recently built machine features 4 HDDs, 3 of which are identical SATA drives, and the 4th of which is an IDE drive. The one IDE drive and one of the SATA drives live in Vantec hotswap trays. The forrmer being for mass import of data from other older machines, and the latter being the main boot drive on the machine.
The idea was to have the boot drive running from a SATA drive, (faster), in a hotswap tray, so in the event of problems, I could just take it out and replace it with a fourth identical SATA drive kept in an identical reserve Vantec SATA hotswap tray. (Reliability of access to data).
I also put another boot partition on one of the two internal SATA drives, so as to enable patching of the main boot drive.
This entailed cloning the main boot partition on the SATA drive in the SATA hotswap tray onto one of the partitions on one of the internal SATA drives. Never having cloned anything before, I got a neighbor, (since moved), who was a Brazilian IT professional to do the clone job.
The result of this cloneing job, however, is that although I can go into the bios, and reset the boot disk priority to have the internal drive boot, as long as the main SATA boot drive is in the machine; whenever I shut down the machine and remove the main boot drive to put in the spare main boot drive to clone the OS onto it, the machine refuses to boot.
What it does, with the main boot drive removed, is go through the process of booting up to the point where one usually enters one's password, at which point it stops without bringing up the password entry box, then just sits like that indefinitely showing the Windopes XP logo.
From past experience, I think this is being caused by MS's antipiracy measures. When XP is installed on an HDD for the first time, it puts a flag on the boot track of the HDD it is being installed on; AND somehow increments a counter which keeps track of how often this serial number of XP has been installed on an HDD lacking that flag. When the count hits five, they cut off your activation priviliges, and you have to phone them to activate.
I know this, (with Vista I am told the count is 3), because I once bought some Broderbund software that came 75% disabled, and you had to register with them to get an activation key to enable the features of said software. Problem was they had shutdown their registration program for the software long before I bought it; and there were no more "activation keys" available.
I managed to crudely Hack their registration file so as to enable all the features of the software; BUT the software stuck an "Illegal Usage" flag on my boottrack, and if for any reason you ever had to uninstall it and reinstall it, their "Illegal Usage" flag prevented reinstallation. The only way around it that I knew was to low level format the drive to get rid of their "Illegal Usage" flag, but in so doing, I was also removing XP's flag without knowing it existed.
As a result of that after 5 low level formats my activation priviliges for that copy of XP were cut off unless I phoned them and explained what happened, because otherwise they think you are using one copy of Windopes on five different machines; and I think that is what I am up against here. I think they somehow have things setup so as not to allow complete cloneing of Windopes.
But since this is a new Windopes license, and it is only being used on one machine, what I am trying to do is NOT illegal. I have boot track utilities, though I don't have a clue how to use them. Any help or suggestions much appreciated.
My most recently built machine features 4 HDDs, 3 of which are identical SATA drives, and the 4th of which is an IDE drive. The one IDE drive and one of the SATA drives live in Vantec hotswap trays. The forrmer being for mass import of data from other older machines, and the latter being the main boot drive on the machine.
The idea was to have the boot drive running from a SATA drive, (faster), in a hotswap tray, so in the event of problems, I could just take it out and replace it with a fourth identical SATA drive kept in an identical reserve Vantec SATA hotswap tray. (Reliability of access to data).
I also put another boot partition on one of the two internal SATA drives, so as to enable patching of the main boot drive.
This entailed cloning the main boot partition on the SATA drive in the SATA hotswap tray onto one of the partitions on one of the internal SATA drives. Never having cloned anything before, I got a neighbor, (since moved), who was a Brazilian IT professional to do the clone job.
The result of this cloneing job, however, is that although I can go into the bios, and reset the boot disk priority to have the internal drive boot, as long as the main SATA boot drive is in the machine; whenever I shut down the machine and remove the main boot drive to put in the spare main boot drive to clone the OS onto it, the machine refuses to boot.
What it does, with the main boot drive removed, is go through the process of booting up to the point where one usually enters one's password, at which point it stops without bringing up the password entry box, then just sits like that indefinitely showing the Windopes XP logo.
From past experience, I think this is being caused by MS's antipiracy measures. When XP is installed on an HDD for the first time, it puts a flag on the boot track of the HDD it is being installed on; AND somehow increments a counter which keeps track of how often this serial number of XP has been installed on an HDD lacking that flag. When the count hits five, they cut off your activation priviliges, and you have to phone them to activate.
I know this, (with Vista I am told the count is 3), because I once bought some Broderbund software that came 75% disabled, and you had to register with them to get an activation key to enable the features of said software. Problem was they had shutdown their registration program for the software long before I bought it; and there were no more "activation keys" available.
I managed to crudely Hack their registration file so as to enable all the features of the software; BUT the software stuck an "Illegal Usage" flag on my boottrack, and if for any reason you ever had to uninstall it and reinstall it, their "Illegal Usage" flag prevented reinstallation. The only way around it that I knew was to low level format the drive to get rid of their "Illegal Usage" flag, but in so doing, I was also removing XP's flag without knowing it existed.
As a result of that after 5 low level formats my activation priviliges for that copy of XP were cut off unless I phoned them and explained what happened, because otherwise they think you are using one copy of Windopes on five different machines; and I think that is what I am up against here. I think they somehow have things setup so as not to allow complete cloneing of Windopes.
But since this is a new Windopes license, and it is only being used on one machine, what I am trying to do is NOT illegal. I have boot track utilities, though I don't have a clue how to use them. Any help or suggestions much appreciated.
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