On 3/21/2012 4:29 PM, dc wrote: > Le 21/03/2012 20:41, David H. Bailey écrit : >> If any of those were changed significantly the authorization program >> would view it as being a different computer and refuse to run until it >> was re-authorized. >> >> When you did the "restore" did you also change any hardware? And did >> you restore to an earlier operating system? > > The only change in hardware after the authorization was an extra hard > disk. And I only restored my Windows 7 installation to the state is was > one day earlier - some installation had messed up my system a bit, so I > wanted to roll back. But my Finale had been authorized long before that. > And my restoration was to the same disk. That's why I'm wondering what > the authorization is based on, so I could avoid this kind of incident. > > By restore, I mean restoring an image of my system, and not the Windows > restore feature, which I have disabled. >
that extra hard drive may have done it (although those of us who can think rationally can understand that it shouldn't make a difference.) -- David H. Bailey [email protected] _______________________________________________ Finale mailing list [email protected] http://lists.shsu.edu/mailman/listinfo/finale
