>> But I don't think mine was really far off the mark >> anyway. In both cases the issue was a server problem, >> unrelated to any problems in the products themselves. >> Tom was trying to make this into a problem with Windows >> 7, which it clearly is not. > > You keep slicing and dicing every MS problem to find any > way you can to put the responsibility on somebody else.
Oh? What "somebody else" did I try to put the problem on? > When a company chooses to have an activation key that very > much becomes an integral part of the product. The product > will have limited use without it. It becomes the vendor's > responsibility to make sure activation works all the time. It's pretty difficult to get past the simple fact that the issue had only to do with delivery of beta test keys, and nothing to do with the released product WHICH DOESN'T GET KEYS THIS WAY. Yet somehow you manage. ************************************************************************* ** List info, subscription management, list rules, archives, privacy ** ** policy, calmness, a member map, and more at http://www.cguys.org/ ** *************************************************************************
