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Topic: [WTS]Cheap Windows 7&8 and MS Office key - page 4. (Read 10235 times)

full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
August 25, 2012, 09:53:10 PM
#37
The 7 keys won't expire just because Windows 8 is out.
Finally.  But good luck convincing grue and LoupGaroux.
vip
Activity: 574
Merit: 500
Don't send me a pm unless you gpg encrypt it.
August 25, 2012, 09:50:07 PM
#36
Thanks for giving more feedbacks. Many of my customers bought windows 7 key rather than windows 8 key. As far as I know, no one complaints to me that their windows 7 has expired.

The 7 keys won't expire just because Windows 8 is out.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
August 25, 2012, 09:47:55 PM
#35
Thanks for giving more feedbacks. Many of my customers bought windows 7 key rather than windows 8 key. As far as I know, no one complaints to me that their windows 7 has expired.
hero member
Activity: 561
Merit: 500
August 25, 2012, 03:29:10 PM
#34
I bought also some keys from softwareseller.
Till now everything worked fine and he also gives additional support and fast answers. So if i see anything interesting, i will again buy! i would say:
stop spaming and attacking his offers. If you want to buy, write him, if you do not want to buy, go ahead and read other threats...

Thank you for your good offers and the support. looks very good till now.

btw i bought office, kaspersky, win8 and win7
first 2 i already tried, last 2 i will soon, but i have no fear that they will not work, he seems to be fair and trustfull till now.

sorry for bad english, could be better i know Smiley
hero member
Activity: 778
Merit: 1002
August 25, 2012, 12:20:19 PM
#33
Not a shill, just irritated by getting called out by sumdumhung.

Softwareseller is where I'm getting my keys until my SR guy shows back up with cheaper keys.
legendary
Activity: 2058
Merit: 1434
August 25, 2012, 12:13:24 PM
#32
see:
Careful, your CoinDiver sock puppet posts are blowing your cover!

Your Win 8 keys are worthless, this RTM version which MSDN states quite clearly is time limited and WILL NOT BE UPGRADEABLE or converted. Same thing that happened when the RTM build of Win 7 came out. Anyone who subscribes to Tech Net knew this a month ago.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
August 25, 2012, 09:15:56 AM
#31
Your Win 8 keys are worthless, this RTM version which MSDN states quite clearly is time limited and WILL NOT BE UPGRADEABLE or converted. Same thing that happened when the RTM build of Win 7 came out. Anyone who subscribes to Tech Net knew this a month ago.
RTM aka Release to manufacturing,
Careful, your CoinDiver sock puppet posts are blowing your cover!
I thought that he really acted like a shill account of mine a day ago when I saw his reply. I was surprised that he spent so much time defending myself. Maybe he just wants the truth to be out. I will not operate a shill account so obviously.
Anyway, thank you CoinDiver for defending the truth.
PS: see my sig for my history transactions. I surely have a bunch of shill accounts including various hero members on this forum.
sr. member
Activity: 574
Merit: 250
August 25, 2012, 09:01:47 AM
#30
Careful, your CoinDiver sock puppet posts are blowing your cover!

Your Win 8 keys are worthless, this RTM version which MSDN states quite clearly is time limited and WILL NOT BE UPGRADEABLE or converted. Same thing that happened when the RTM build of Win 7 came out. Anyone who subscribes to Tech Net knew this a month ago.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
August 25, 2012, 04:22:11 AM
#29
If you take an MSDN key and give it to one of your friends it will keep working until.....  your friend passes it on and that friend passes it on.

If you sell it it will keep working until it hits a certain number of activations.  So if one of your customers uses it multiple times the same thing will happen to everyone using it.  So you can be attempting to be 'conservative' with the activations and you will still get deactivated.  
That would be the consequence if you buy key from unreliable seller. I only sell one key to one customer. You could check the hash of your key with my other customers to make sure I'm telling the truth.
hero member
Activity: 778
Merit: 1002
August 24, 2012, 09:05:44 PM
#28
WRONG. If Microsoft sense the keys are activated across multiple locations, they might decide to kill the keys.
From that point on, your activated copy will all of a sudden be flagged as a pirated copy, and you will know this when your screen goes black.

Please show me where that has ever happened?

Please explain to me how your theory of MS "sensing" multiple locations takes in to account ISP dynamically allocating IP addresses? It's a damn good thing that people can't pick computers up and move them to another locations... or god forbid us someone else's internet connection (someone should invent a place where you can sit down and connect to the internet, while ordering say, coffee).

With how wise spread the sale of these keys are, people would be complaining that that happened to them... rather than just regurgitation the BS from MS that it is possible. MS doesn't need to bad PR from people claiming there "legit" copy of Windows was deactivated.

And before you scare anyone in to believing your misinformation, please clarify that by "you will know this when your screen goes black", that what you mean is your BACKGROUND PICTURE IS DISABLED.

OH GOD, IT THE WORLD IS GOING TO END! MY SCREEN IS LESS COLORFUL!

Get over it man.

Wow.  You think Microsoft cares about bad PR for copies of Windows being deactivated?  I have seen them do it, they do it all the time.

If you take an MSDN key and give it to one of your friends it will keep working until.....  your friend passes it on and that friend passes it on.

If you sell it it will keep working until it hits a certain number of activations.  So if one of your customers uses it multiple times the same thing will happen to everyone using it.  So you can be attempting to be 'conservative' with the activations and you will still get deactivated. 


We are talking about single use keys.
legendary
Activity: 1386
Merit: 1004
August 24, 2012, 09:02:29 PM
#27
WRONG. If Microsoft sense the keys are activated across multiple locations, they might decide to kill the keys.
From that point on, your activated copy will all of a sudden be flagged as a pirated copy, and you will know this when your screen goes black.

Please show me where that has ever happened?

Please explain to me how your theory of MS "sensing" multiple locations takes in to account ISP dynamically allocating IP addresses? It's a damn good thing that people can't pick computers up and move them to another locations... or god forbid us someone else's internet connection (someone should invent a place where you can sit down and connect to the internet, while ordering say, coffee).

With how wise spread the sale of these keys are, people would be complaining that that happened to them... rather than just regurgitation the BS from MS that it is possible. MS doesn't need to bad PR from people claiming there "legit" copy of Windows was deactivated.

And before you scare anyone in to believing your misinformation, please clarify that by "you will know this when your screen goes black", that what you mean is your BACKGROUND PICTURE IS DISABLED.

OH GOD, IT THE WORLD IS GOING TO END! MY SCREEN IS LESS COLORFUL!

Get over it man.

Wow.  You think Microsoft cares about bad PR for copies of Windows being deactivated?  I have seen them do it, they do it all the time.

If you take an MSDN key and give it to one of your friends it will keep working until.....  your friend passes it on and that friend passes it on.

If you sell it it will keep working until it hits a certain number of activations.  So if one of your customers uses it multiple times the same thing will happen to everyone using it.  So you can be attempting to be 'conservative' with the activations and you will still get deactivated. 



hero member
Activity: 778
Merit: 1002
August 24, 2012, 01:40:42 PM
#26
WRONG. If Microsoft sense the keys are activated across multiple locations, they might decide to kill the keys.
From that point on, your activated copy will all of a sudden be flagged as a pirated copy, and you will know this when your screen goes black.

Please show me where that has ever happened?

Please explain to me how your theory of MS "sensing" multiple locations takes in to account ISP dynamically allocating IP addresses? It's a damn good thing that people can't pick computers up and move them to another locations... or god forbid us someone else's internet connection (someone should invent a place where you can sit down and connect to the internet, while ordering say, coffee).

With how wise spread the sale of these keys are, people would be complaining that that happened to them... rather than just regurgitation the BS from MS that it is possible. MS doesn't need to bad PR from people claiming there "legit" copy of Windows was deactivated.

And before you scare anyone in to believing your misinformation, please clarify that by "you will know this when your screen goes black", that what you mean is your BACKGROUND PICTURE IS DISABLED.

OH GOD, IT THE WORLD IS GOING TO END! MY SCREEN IS LESS COLORFUL!

Get over it man.
legendary
Activity: 1134
Merit: 1005
August 24, 2012, 01:26:54 PM
#25
WRONG. If Microsoft sense the keys are activated across multiple locations, they might decide to kill the keys.
From that point on, your activated copy will all of a sudden be flagged as a pirated copy, and you will know this when your screen goes black.
hero member
Activity: 778
Merit: 1002
August 24, 2012, 10:56:23 AM
#24
I bought 2 Windows 7 Pro keys from softwareseller. Both activated without issue. From my long history of dealing with keys of this exact nature, I do not expect to have any issues at all. Like I said earlier, the only trouble you will have with these keys is if you try to use them on two machines.

The other issue you MAY have is if you wait too long to use them. MS seems to be willing to deactivate keys if they have not been used, but I have never had them inactivate one of these keys that has only been used on one machine.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
August 24, 2012, 07:24:55 AM
#23
Op edited
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
August 24, 2012, 01:56:56 AM
#22
Sold 2 keys via pm. Will ask buyer to provide feedback if he wishes.
full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
August 23, 2012, 08:52:36 PM
#21
Wow, I sort of feel like i'm standing in front of a building on fire holding a burnt out match just as the cops turn up, lol

I just asked as I have a gameing laptop and don't fancy forking out another £200 to microsoft, Hell I'm moving over to linux on main p.c.  but it does not support games (before I get flamed I know it can but I want to install and play, not install, configure, crash, reconfigure, tweek, get some play time, crash!).
I'll state this simple truth AGAIN. This works exactly like a retail copy!  Only, from a legal point of view, you shouldn't use it for gaming even if Microsoft has no way of distinguishing gaming and developing.
hero member
Activity: 778
Merit: 1002
August 23, 2012, 11:04:27 AM
#20
I have been using keys from sources like this for years now. The only issue I have ever had was when I key was used on two machines.
copper member
Activity: 2310
Merit: 1032
August 23, 2012, 11:02:06 AM
#19
Wow, I sort of feel like i'm standing in front of a building on fire holding a burnt out match just as the cops turn up, lol

I just asked as I have a gameing laptop and don't fancy forking out another £200 to microsoft, Hell I'm moving over to linux on main p.c.  but it does not support games (before I get flamed I know it can but I want to install and play, not install, configure, crash, reconfigure, tweek, get some play time, crash!).

full member
Activity: 140
Merit: 100
August 23, 2012, 07:12:26 AM
#18
if you want to make any sales at all you gotta stop being an asshole, these people are your potential customers holy shit
If that offended you, I'm sorry. I was just being humorous.
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