I have an old branded PC which came preloaded with OEM licensed copy of Windows Vista Home.
The motherboard died and now it cannot even power up. Since it is a very old AMD socket and chipset dating back to 2006 or 2005, getting a replacement motherboard is impossible. So the solution is to get a new Intel processor and motherboard.
Everything else (casing, RAM sticks, PSU, HDD, ODD, memory card reader) will be reused if possible.
However, it is possible that Windows Vista will detect the motherboard and processor change as significant changes and thus requires reactivation.
Does Microsoft consider this a completely new PC and thus requires a new license legally? Am I eligible for re-activation in such a situation even if it requires phone activation?
As far as I am concerned, I have not installed another copy of Windows Vista on another machine, thus there is no piracy, reusing of license, illegal duplication, or infringement of copyright involved.
The motherboard died and now it cannot even power up. Since it is a very old AMD socket and chipset dating back to 2006 or 2005, getting a replacement motherboard is impossible. So the solution is to get a new Intel processor and motherboard.
Everything else (casing, RAM sticks, PSU, HDD, ODD, memory card reader) will be reused if possible.
However, it is possible that Windows Vista will detect the motherboard and processor change as significant changes and thus requires reactivation.
Does Microsoft consider this a completely new PC and thus requires a new license legally? Am I eligible for re-activation in such a situation even if it requires phone activation?
As far as I am concerned, I have not installed another copy of Windows Vista on another machine, thus there is no piracy, reusing of license, illegal duplication, or infringement of copyright involved.