I have an unused key you can have from my old subscription. I'm not sure of
the legality of me giving it to you, but mine was never used and was from a
legit MS subscription. Shall I just post it here? I don't want to get anyone
in trouble..

-----Original Message-----
From: ProfoxTech [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Richard
Kaye
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 3:24 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [NF] Activating last year's downloads from Action Pack

I have on occasion retrieved old keys from my MSDN subscription although
it's been a while. There was some request mechanism where you could ask for
up to 3 keys at a time. Sadly I don't recall the details and of course this
was not an Action Pack (r) subscription. Have you tried contacting the fine
people at MS support?

--

rk
-----Original Message-----
From: ProfoxTech [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Ted
Roche
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2014 3:10 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [NF] Activating last year's downloads from Action Pack

Looking for advice on dealing with Action Pack and older software.

I've been an Action Pack subscriber for a number of years, and have a
current sub. However, our clients aren't always the most prompt about
keeping up with the most recent version of MS tools, (can you say "Vista?")
so my machines typically lag a year or two or three behind the current
versions. Usually, this isn't a problem, but I needed to replace a
development workstation, and found I didn't have the activation keys for
Office 2007. Got Win7 and many VFPs working fine, but really need Office for
some automation processes. I'm thinking I tossed the paperwork during one of
my very rare cleaning sessions. Most of my older disks have the activation
keys written on them, just for this reason, but not that one.

Microsoft seems to think that everyone only runs the latest versions of
their software, so there are none of the older keys listed on their site.
It might be nice if that were true, from a support standpoint. But that
would require Microsoft actually ship software that works at the
version-dot-zero level, without a service pack, and that it is so perfectly
backwards-compatible that it runs all the solutions we've written years ago.

Update: Installed Office 2013 Pro downloaded from the MS Partner Network,
typed in my 20-character mixed number and letter key, and it is refusing to
activate the software, "Something went wrong. Please try again later." I
love when they treat me like an idiot.

Einstein allegedly said, "Insanity is trying the same thing over and over
and expecting different results." That seems to be a pretty good
description, today.

DRM seems to be a great way to annoy your customers and "partners"

--
Ted Roche


[excessive quoting removed by server]

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