17.04.2007
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gratuit : Astuces , Secrets et compatibilités logicielles de Windows XP et Vista






Article de Brian Livingston qui nous explique que :
Microsoft nous indique toujours qu’il s’oppose au « logiciel pirate » qui cause des milliers de vente de copies non autorisées de Windows.
Mais en meme temps la compagnie de Redmond a facilité les choses pour les pirates en ajoutant une ligne à l’enregistrement qui peut être changé de 0 en 1 qui permet d’activer Vista indéfiniment.
extrait de l’article:
Microsoft allows bypass of Vista activation
![]() | By Brian Livingston
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The following describes the Registry key that’s involved.
Step 1. While running a copy of Windows Vista that hasn’t yet been activated, click the Start button, type regedit into the Search box, then press Enter to launch the Registry Editor.
Step 2. Explore down to the following Registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE SOFTWARE Microsoft Windows NT CurrentVersion SL
Step 3. Right-click the Registry key named SkipRearm and click Edit. The default is a Dword (a double word or 4 bytes) with a hex value of 00000000. Change this value to any positive integer, such as 00000001, save the change, and close the Registry Editor.
Step 4. Start a command prompt with administrative rights. The fastest way to do this is to click the Start button, enter cmd in the Search box, then press Ctrl+Shift+Enter. If you’re asked for a network username and password, provide the ones that log you into your domain. You may be asked to approve a User Account Control prompt and to provide an administrator password.
Step 5. Type one of the following two commands and press Enter:
slmgr -rearm
or
rundll32 slc.dll,SLReArmWindows
Either command uses Vista’s built-in Software Licensing Manager (SLMGR) to push the activation deadline out to 30 days after the command is run. Changing SkipRearm from 0 to 1 allows SLMGR to do this an indefinite number of times. Running either command initializes the value of SkipRearm back to 0.
Step 6. Reboot the PC to make the postponement take effect. (After you log in, if you like, you can open a command prompt and run the command slmgr -xpr to see Vista’s new expiration date and time. I explained the slmgr command and its parameters in my Feb. 15 article.)
Step 7. To extend the activation deadline of Vista indefinitely, repeat steps 1 through 6 as necessary.
Any crooked PC seller with even the slightest technical skill could easily install a command file that would carry out steps 1 through 6 automatically. The program could run slmgr -rearm three times, 30 days apart, to postpone Vista’s activation deadline to 120 days. It could then run skip -rearm every 30 days, for a period of months if not years, by first resetting the SkipRearm key.
The program could be scheduled to check Vista’s activation deadline during every reboot, and to remind the user to reboot once a month if a deadline was nearing. The buyer of such a PC would never even see an activation reminder, much less be required to go through the activation process.
If you happen to buy a Vista PC from a little-known seller, and the price was too good to be true, use Vista’s search function to look for the string SkipRearm in files. You may discover that your "bargain" computer will mysteriously start demanding activation in a year or two — but your product key won’t be valid.
I asked Microsoft why SkipRearm is included in Vista if it can be used to create machines that appear not to need activation for long periods. A Microsoft spokewoman replied, "I connected with my colleagues and learned, unfortunately, we do not have information to share at this time." (I can’t identify the speaker because the policy of Waggener Edstrom, Microsoft’s public-relations firm, prohibits the naming of p.r. spokespersons.)
In my testing of Microsoft’s back-door loophole, I’ve found that the technique can be used to postpone the activation deadline one year or longer. It may or may not, however, work forever, as I describe below.
VIA windowsSecret.com
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Tous sur la compatibilité des logiciels et du matériel avec Windoxs Vista :
Windows Vista RTM Software Compatibility List :
Astuces et Secrets Windows :
2007
- How to get Windows software at half-price - April 12, 2007
- How to prevent and remove ’phantom’ devices - April 5, 2007
- Hundreds of hard-drive repair tips - March 22, 2007
- Microsoft allows bypass of Vista activation - March 15, 2007
- User Account Control offers improved security - March 8, 2007
- Are Registry cleaners worthwhile? - March 1, 2007
- Pop-up ads can land you in jail - February 22, 2007
- Use Vista without activation for 120 days - February 15, 2007
- More on the Vista upgrade secret - February 8, 2007
- Get Vista upgrade, never pay full price - February 1, 2007
- Should you choose Intel or AMD? - January 25, 2007
- More cases of adware running amok - January 18, 2007
- An explosion of info on passwords - January 11, 2007
- How to ease your password hassles - January 4, 2007
- Watch out for end-of-year exploits - December 29, 2006, news update
- What to do when a DLL goes missing - December 14, 2006
- Should you use AOL’s free antivirus? - December 7, 2006
- When your Recovery Console goes bad - November 30, 2006
- Free antivirus, a new firewall, and IP sniffing - November 16, 2006
- This is a test message - November 7, 2006, news update
- LangaList is merging with Windows Secrets - November 2, 2006, news update
- IE 7 needs tweaking for safety - October 26, 2006
- Vista changes lock out antivirus makers - October 23, 2006, news update
- OneCare halts flow of antivirus info - October 12, 2006
- Readers reveal the secrets of IE 7 - September 28, 2006
- Workaround needed for IE hole - September 22, 2006, news update
- Internet Explorer 7 looms - be prepared - September 14, 2006
- All readers get Dilbert free - September 7, 2006, news update
- How fast does Windows Update update? - August 24, 2006, news update
- Questions arise on PC World tests - August 10, 2006
2006
- Watch out for end-of-year exploits - December 29, 2006, news update
- What to do when a DLL goes missing - December 14, 2006
- Should you use AOL’s free antivirus? - December 7, 2006
- When your Recovery Console goes bad - November 30, 2006
- Free antivirus, a new firewall, and IP sniffing - November 16, 2006
- This is a test message - November 7, 2006, news update
- LangaList is merging with Windows Secrets - November 2, 2006, news update
- IE 7 needs tweaking for safety - October 26, 2006
- Vista changes lock out antivirus makers - October 23, 2006, news update
- OneCare halts flow of antivirus info - October 12, 2006
- Readers reveal the secrets of IE 7 - September 28, 2006
- Workaround needed for IE hole - September 22, 2006, news update
- Internet Explorer 7 looms - be prepared - September 14, 2006
- All readers get Dilbert free - September 7, 2006, news update
- How fast does Windows Update update? - August 24, 2006, news update
- Questions arise on PC World tests - August 10, 2006
- Should you use Windows Live Messenger? - July 27, 2006
- Shavlik will lift download restrictions - July 20, 2006, news update
- Free Windows Update alternative is released - July 13, 2006
- Dump Windows Update, use alternatives - June 29, 2006
- Genuine Advantage is Microsoft spyware - June 15, 2006
- To auto-update or not to auto-update - May 25, 2006
- When Automatic Updates can be harmful - May 11, 2006
- April 11 patch re-released with fixes - April 27, 2006
- More ways to use disposable addresses - April 13, 2006
- Get a disposable e-mail address - March 30, 2006
- Readers respond on controlling reboots - March 16, 2006
- Stop Windows’ 10-minute reboot reminders - March 2, 2006
- Readers respond on Deep Six spamwall - February 16, 2006
- Connection scoring beats spam filtering - January 26, 2006
- WMF hole still reverberates with users - January 12, 2006
- Install Microsoft’s WMF patch - January 6, 2006, news update
- Windows metafile hole requires unofficial patch - January 4, 2006, news update
2005
- Folder templates fix Explorer headaches - December 15, 2005
- 2005 Gear of the Year, part 2 - November 22, 2005
- Proactive protection not quite ready - November 16, 2005, news update
- 2005 Gear of the Year, part 1 - November 10, 2005
- Microsoft goes antiphishing - October 27, 2005
- Can Microsoft deliver perfect patches? - October 13, 2005
- Antispyware apps vie for top spot - September 29, 2005
- ZoneAlarm update fixes tricky glitches - September 15, 2005
- Protect your media player from podcasts - August 11, 2005
- Greasemonkey fix is released - August 4, 2005, news update
- Podcasts can infect your PC - July 28, 2005
- News update has new look - July 21, 2005, news update
- Startup offers free Wi-Fi security - July 14, 2005
- Should you buy a security appliance? - June 30, 2005
- Readers offer tips on Wi-Fi - June 16, 2005
- Wi-Finally: wireless security that actually works - May 26, 2005
- Is Firefox still safer than IE? - May 12, 2005
- Become a patch-management expert - April 28, 2005
- Windows 2003 SP1: good but troublesome - April 14, 2005
- Don’t fall for PC scan scams - March 24, 2005
- Upgrading to Firefox 1.0.1 - March 10, 2005
- Adware makers threaten critics - February 24, 2005
- Readers reveal their adware battles - February 10, 2005
- Anti-adware misses most malware - January 27, 2005
- Strengthen your security baseline - January 13, 2005
2004
- IMAP Secrets - December 16, 2004
- Secrets of Firefox 1.0 - December 2, 2004
- Protect Internet Explorer without SP2 - part two - November 18, 2004
- Protect Internet Explorer without SP2 - part one - November 4, 2004
- Dump the Windows Firewall - October 21, 2004
- Secure Windows 2000 and Me (because MS won’t) - October 7, 2004
- The state of the computing industry - September 23, 2004
- Problems mount with XP SP2 - September 9, 2004
- XP Service Pack 2 released in phases - August 19, 2004
- Microsoft’s little-known note-taker - August 5, 2004
- Woody’s merges with Windows Secrets - July 22, 2004
- SP2’s Windows Firewall won’t be enough - July 8, 2004
- The promise of XP SP2 - June 17, 2004
- Lock attackers out of your PC - June 3, 2004
- Readers find new phishing attacks - May 20, 2004
- Hackers grab IE’s address bar - May 6, 2004
- Intellimouse phones home - April 22, 2004
- What’s really going on with Google - April 8, 2004
- Office XP Service Pack 3 problems bite users - March 25, 2004
- XP Service Pack 1 clogs USB ports - March 11, 2004
- Readers say Google is losing its relevance - February 26, 2004
- Readers send tips on SBS 2003 - February 12, 2004
- SBS 2003 cuts costs - January 29, 2004
- New technology shines at CES - January 15, 2004
2003
- End-of-year Windows Tip-O-Rama - December 18, 2003
- Avoid holiday media headaches - December 4, 2003
- Live from Comdex: Windows winners - November 20, 2003
- Microsoft PDC reveals the future of Windows - November 6, 2003
- Fix for broken MS patch is released - October 16, 2003
- Exploit of broken MS patch is ’in the wild’ - October 2, 2003
- MS03-032 / 822925 patch doesn’t work - September 18, 2003
- IE security patch breaks ASP.NET on XP - September 4, 2003
- In the aftermath of Blaster - August 21, 2003
- Worms shut down thousands of Windows PCs - August 7, 2003
- Critical flaw affects almost all Windows versions - July 24, 2003
- Known issues afflict Windows 2000 SP4 - July 10, 2003
- Solve your XP network headaches - June 19, 2003
- Passport flaws let anyone control passwords - May 22, 2003
- XP, IE, and OE patches cause their own problems - May 8, 2003
- XP Service Pack 1 hoses CD-ROM and floppy-disk access - April 24, 2003
- Microsoft to release Windows Server 2003 - April 10, 2003
- Fun with Microsoft licensing - March 13, 2003
- XP passwords rendered useless - February 13, 2003
11:26 | Lien permanent | Tags : gratuit, secrets microsoft, astuces xp vista, logiciels compatibles avec Vista, Microsoft Vista activation |
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