Download Windows 7 Home Premium Oa Acer
You can download retail media in actual fact. Many users have reported these to work with Windows 7 and Dell Product Keys.
This is a much different case from XP and Vista. I guess internet activation will be required. You may wish to use the tool to create a DVD or bootable USB stick (4 GB or more) respectively. Drivers are of course available on the Dell Drivers and Downloads Page which can be accessed from. If you purchased Office 2010 with your system, make sure you have your product key and download the Office 2010 trial from Microsoft, instead use your product key Your Windows product Key is on a sticker at the base of your system.
Other useful things are in (back up as it only lets you download 3 times and requires use of 32 bit internet explorer, has maybe programs you don't want such as McAfee),, Dell Webcam Centre (optional) and finally (Optional). Finally here is a review I wrote on some. Edit: 'You can download retail media in actual fact' was'You can download the media in actual fact' in error. Vanheusen, you are best to use the Dell Factory Restore if you can, as its generally faster and gives you all your system drivers etc. The Flash, I am sorry I didn't explain very well, the download links I provided are the retail media, I should of stated that. Personally I have not used them with a Dell product key, I have however used them with an upgrade key and also a volume license key and they have worked fine via internet activation.
I am going by and a few posts earlier (takes a long time for me to find them). In this post queries whether the Dell Product Key will work with the Retail Media. Sparkotronic then goes ahead and uses the media and defines it as a painless reinstall (so therefore I assume no phone activation was needed and internet activation sufficed).
There were also a few users before him that got along fine. When he said that his key won't validate, I assumed he already tried to reinstall using some other media, so he possibly doesn't have his Recovery Partition intact. When I have activated over the phone, I'm on the phone for less than 2-3 minutes - not as painless as Internet activation, but still relatively painless. Yes, Retail keys will absolutely work for upgrading (In-Place and Anytime upgrades) OEM Windows to a higher version of Windows, but activation after installation is what I'm talking about. Hey THEFLASH1932 I was wondering if you knew of a place (without using a torrent) that I could download the Windows Vista OS disc. The one (digital river) seems to not work anymore.
Also I submitted a revised idea on Idea Storm (link below) to make Dell OEM.iso files available to download. I actually submitted this idea before but this time I thought it out a bit more including a marketing strategy, security, performance, safety net, giving Dell a good name, keeping people on genuine software, reliability, the mention of the retail.isos etc. The only ones I knew of was the Digital River links, but having a long-time MSDN account and all the ISO's I could ever need, I have not 'looked around' the Internet enough to know if there are some other 'gems' out there. I like your post on IdeaStorm about the downloadable ISO's. I think it is unconscionable for OEM's to NOT supply the actual disk. We are talking pennies per disk for the OEM (so they could even charge everyone a non-optional $5 for it at ordering).
Maybe they figure people are just going to lose it anyway, but. Sure there is the Recovery Partition for Factory Restores - I think this is an awesome way to reinstall the OS - it is much faster and easier than installing from scratch. Having to create Recovery Disks is a poor substitute for a real installation disk. My biggest problem with the Recovery Partition is it is inconvenient to advanced users who may need additional partitions or drive space.
When you get a system with 3-4 partitions already configured, how are you supposed to separate your OS and Data (for those who believe in that format), or how are you supposed to dual-boot (let alone triple - or more), for those who need/want to do that? Even if you do something as simple as install a second bootable OS, it breaks the recovery partition. In my opinion, there is NO reason for Dell not to include a disk (for FREE, for crying out loud) with the system. Or (although I think this option less likely) provide permanent and unlimited location for a download (not one restricted to a single download or that is only available for the life of that OS or for the warranty term of the system).
Hi folks Here is the situation: Sometime in 2014, my brother took his PC to a repair shop. To make a long story short, the store sold him a Windows 7 Home Premium OA (What does the OA mean BTW? Download Introduction To Banking Casu Girardone Molyneux Pdf Free. ). The store installed the windows for him on his PC.
UpdateStar is compatible with Windows platforms. UpdateStar has been tested to meet all of the technical requirements to be compatible with Windows 10, 8.1, Windows 8. Premium Oa Hp Iso. Page 1 of 4 - Where to download a legal copy of Windows 7 Home Premium OEM.iso. Preparation Guide Before Posting Malware Issues in. Microsoft Community Contributor Award Recipient. Windows 7 SP1. Home Premium, English, 64 bit is X17-58997.iso Windows 7 home prem. OA Acer group.
The store gave him an ordinary DVD --nothing preprinted on it like a commercial DVD one would buy. Just a standard DVD on which Windows 7 is written by hand on it. Affixed to the sleeve containing this DVD is a COA sticker with a product key on it. It says on the COA 'Windows 7 Home Premium OA' (do not know what OA means as I said before). It also says on the COA 'Acer Group'.
Drivers Foston Ultra Joystick. My brother's PC is not a Acer. It is a home build, originally with Windows Vista on it. Vista was then replaced by that store with the above described Windows 7. My questions are: Question 1 Is this a valid Windows 7 key that he could use to reinstall his Windows on his PC (the one on which the windows was first installed)?
Question 2 Could he use it (the key) to install this windows on a completely different PC (new parts including new motherboards etc.)? Question 3 Does this looks legitimate to you folks?
I do not know what to think but it sure looks kind of fishy to me? OA = OEM Activation It's the version that comes from the big oems (Dell, HP, Acer, etc.) and is preinstalled using a SLIC key embedded in the BIOS, thus not requiring activation after installation. However, it only works on those systems with the correct SLIC key. Looks like that repair shop copied an Acer DVD and peeled the sticker off, then put it on your brother's system. Very much not legit. The key has most likely been used more than once and is now blacklisted by Microsoft. I'd further wager that that shop used an activation crack to hide that fact.
OA = OEM Activation It's the version that comes from the big oems (Dell, HP, Acer, etc.) and is preinstalled using a SLIC key embedded in the BIOS, thus not requiring activation after installation. However, it only works on those systems with the correct SLIC key. Looks like that repair shop copied an Acer DVD and peeled the sticker off, then put it on your brother's system. Very much not legit. The key has most likely been used more than once and is now blacklisted by Microsoft.
I'd further wager that that shop used an activation crack to hide that fact. If the key was blacklisted by Microsoft, how come he still can use it and get all software updates for his Windows?