I'm using the Windows 10 Evaluation software (been using the software for years) but since a few days when I install the OS it gives an 'license has expired' and 'product key has been blocked' when I try to activate.
have you ever installed the ISO from the evaluation center? then you know that it is pre-pidded (eg: is has a product key factory installed that can be activated for an unlimited amount of times but it only activated windows for 90 days and then the installation is expired
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@HotCakeX This exact same behaviour happens to me. For posterity, I am a fully licensed Windows 10 user with a copy of Windows 10 Professional. I use the Evaluation version to build test machines in Hyper-V that I use for blogging. Since 2015, I have been able to rearm each Windows 10 evaluation version twice and then rebuild them once the evaluation expires. As I am constantly running tests this model works perfectly - these are not production machines and are regularly rebuilt.
As the OP says this model of using the evaluation version for testing (surprisingly, that's what it is meant for!) has worked for nearly six years, yet last week, ALL product keys for Windows 10 evaluation are now blocked. EVERY version of Windows 10 (from RTM through to 20H2) now shows "product key blocked". I created a brand new VM and installed from a freshly-downloaded copy of the Windows 10 Enterprise ISO - the same happened, instantly expired and blocked.
It's all very well claiming "you must buy a copy" but for ALREADY FULLY LICENSED USERS running VMs on (Windows 10!) Hyper-V for evaluation purposes, how many copies do I need to buy to use the virtualization software Microsoft have provided? As OP said, this model has worked since inception and clearly Microsoft have now blacklisted or blocked the evaluation keys.
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After a window is first activated, it may be deactivated and reactivated many times during its lifetime. If an application's behavior or state depends on its activation state, it can inspect IsActive to determine which activation state it's in.
Are you testing this in the Designer? Doing this can leave windows open instead of closing them and confuse the situation. You are better to create 2 windows with buttons to swap from one to the other and test them in a client, looking at the console in the diagnostics window (open this with Help / Diagnostics or Ctrl+Shift-F7).
I put print statements in all the internalFrame and visionWindow events. When I first opened the window the following events fired:visionWindowOpenedinternalFrameOpenedinternalFrameActivatedWhen I closed the window these events fired:internalFrameDeactivatedinternalFrameClosingvisionWindowClosedinternalFrameClosedWhen I opened the window a second time these events fired:visionWindowOpenedinternalFrameActivatedWhen I closed the window a second time these events fired:internalFrameDeactivatedinternalFrameClosingvisionWindowClosedinternalFrameClosedThe only difference is that internalFrameOpened only fires the first time, maybe because the window is being cached.
I say it appears as if sound activated recording is turned on because when I put it in record mode the waveform window is paused and no recording is occurring. If sound activated recording was turned off I would expect that the waveform display should be displaying a flatline and scrolling to the right recording silence. As soon as I start the streaming station Audacity starts displaying the waveform and scrolling occurs.
I just tried upgrading to the latest 2.2 version to see if there was a bug fixed but the same behavior occurs in the new version. The described behavior has been occurring for 6 months and the system has been hard booted several times. Thanks for your troubleshooting ideas!
Should eBay merchants be required to state whether or not the copies of Windows 10 they have installed (or have been installed by their refurbisher) have been activated? I recently bought a laptop refurbished by HP. It came with Windows 10 installed. I thought whoopie, I've saved some money there! Upon arrival I discovered the catch: Windows 10 was installed, but it was not activated. Is this deceptive advertising, or just a case of "buyer beware?"
My seller responded. The seller's advice was to contact HP, where my laptop was refurbished. That sounds like a worthwhile effort, however the advice was too late for me. I had already paid the $120 to Microsoft for activation.
The solution is to shop for Windows 10 units, comparing prices on machines running activated copies of the operating system. Ask the seller if Windows 10 is activated if they don't say anything other than 10 is installed.
If you inadvertantly purchase a unit that does not have Windows 10 activated, you can use it as it is until Microsoft says otherwise. At the moment, Microsoft doesn't know what it wants to do about this. Their OS is great, but is definitely not the only fish in the sea, as they say. Microsoft's competition has become quite robust as smart phone use has increased. Microsoft will activate your copy of Windows 10 and support all features for $120 + tax. However, before you spend additional money, read through the good advice in the responses above. Check with your seller/refurbisher first. That might save you some cash.
Actually, I don't believe I would call it deceptive. If the machine has arrived with the operating system installed it is exactly as described. Unless I'm mistaken, any time you buy a new or refurbished machine you have to run setup and register the first time you use it.
Selling merchandise with undisclosed costs is unethical. As of this writing, Windows 10 activation was a $120 cost not disclosed to this buyer in the eBay ad. You say this is OK?! Maybe it is the general, accepted practice of eBay computer sellers to minimize the apparent cost to the customer in this way, but I don't think such deliberate minimizing of total expense makes happy customers. In any case, it inclines this one to leave one of his rare less than 5-star ratings. Perhaps you think it unfair that customers know the total price of items before purchase?
Not having seen the listing it is somewhat difficult to understand to what you are referring. Normally, when I purchase a new computer the operating system is installed and the machine is functional, although I usually must run setup and install any updates to it. Of course, the cost of the operating system is included in the price of the new machine. But as I mentioned, not having seen the listing I'm not sure if that is the case with a refurbished machine or not.
I'm afraid I'm confused regarding what it is that you mean by "activation" and "installed." A computer needs to have an operating system to function. Admittedly, I'm not very familiar with Windows 10, but I can't really see how it was installed without being activated at the time of installation.
Make sure you have the machine successfully connected to the Internet. And if it has been or now is successfully connected to the Internet, go to the Start menu and under Settings go to "Update & Security" and then "Activation" and invoke the "Troubleshooter" link. ( -us/help/20527/windows-10-activation-troubleshooter)
The troubleshooter might just end up concluding "you don't have a valid activation key for this device" and still leaves you non-activated. But its also possible the seller does actually have a valid Windows 10 license for this machine, and the machine is just having trouble reaching the Microsoft activation servers to verify that fact.
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