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HotRod 7th Jun 04 01:35 PM

Is there any way to change upgrade cd to a full install cd? What files need to be changed. Don't want to ad corp files, want retail/full. Would it be SETUPP.INI and ?

Thanks
HotRod

~*McoreD*~ 7th Jun 04 01:46 PM

HotRod, will this have any help? http://www.petri.co.il/use_oem_versi...upgrade_xp.htm

It does exactly the opposite to what you want. I wonder if you can do the reverse process. Sorry, havent tried this myself.

HotRod 7th Jun 04 01:52 PM

Thanks, looks like only thing that I do need to change is the setup.ini
Will test it out

HotRod 7th Jun 04 02:10 PM

Another question
At the end of setup, [during install and before reboot], I want a batch file to run. How would I go about that?

~*McoreD*~ 7th Jun 04 02:50 PM

Is this something similar you are looking after?
http://unattended.msfn.org/xp/batch_commands.htm

HotRod 7th Jun 04 03:04 PM

yeah, there now. Want to load twekui, dotnet and java during install...and when reboot already activated. Now just to figure it all out.

robinwilson16 9th Jun 04 09:23 AM

I just found this:

Quote:

Originally posted by what I found

Unlocking WinXP's setupp.ini
WinXP's setupp.ini controls how the CD acts. Whether it is an OEM version or retail?
First, find your setupp.ini file in the i386 directory on your WinXP CD. Open it up, it'll look something like this:

ExtraData=707A667567736F696F697911AE7E05 Pid=55034000

The Pid value is what we're interested in. What's there now looks like a standard default.
There are special numbers that determine if it's a retail, oem, or volume license edition. First, we break down that number into two parts.
The first five digits determines how the CD will behave, ie is it a retail cd that lets you clean install or upgrade, or an oem cd that only lets you perform a clean install?

The last three digits determines what CD key it will accept. You are able to mix and match these values. For example you could make a WinXP cd that acted like a retail cd, yet accepted OEM keys.

Now, for the actual values. Remember the first and last values are interchangable, but usually you'd keep them as a pair:

Retail = 51882 335

Volume License = 51883 270

OEM = 82503 OEM

So if you wanted a retail CD that took retail keys, the last line of your setupp.ini file would read:

Pid=51882335

And if you wanted a retail CD that took OEM keys, you'd use:

Pid=51882OEM

Note that this does NOT get rid of WinXP's activation.
Changing the Pid to a Volume License will not bypass activation. You must have a volume license (corporate) key to do so.




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