license question OEM-versions

Burgurne

Danish Viking
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Hi all.
A friend want to buy a Windows 7 Home Premium OEM for his PC. So far so good. But the PC is both a gamer-rig and a "family"-PC, and from XP he is used to have 2 Windows installations on the same PC, but on different harddrives, so when the "family"-installation is booting it can't show or destroy his gamer harddrive (used to be marked as "hidden drive"), and when he boot up to game, he has a very tiny system setup running absolutely the least in background, leaving as much as possible power to his games.

Now, I think he will run into troubble with an OEM version of Windows 7, as with 2 different installs on 2 different harddrives, he must activate Windows 7 OEM 2 times, but from different controllers ("family"-install is 1 harddrive, and his "gamer"-install is RAID 0.
Besides these possible troubbles, is it legal to have to installations on one OEM CD-key? It IS the same PC, and they can of course not run on the same time, but it will require 2 activations with some different hardware, most of the hardware are the same though.
 

My Computer

Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
homebrewed
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 retail
CPU
Core i5 3570K @ 4,4Ghz
Motherboard
MSI Z77A GD65
Memory
16Gbyte Corsair C9 1866mhz
Graphics Card(s)
MSI Lightning GTX 770
Sound Card
Auzentech
Monitor(s) Displays
BenQ 24"
Screen Resolution
1920x1200
Hard Drives
Samsung 840 EVO SSD, Samsung SSD 830 256Gbyte, Seagate 3Tbyte HDD, WD 4 Tbyte HDD.
PSU
Zahlmann 850HP
Case
Corsair Carbide 500R
Keyboard
G15 logitech
Mouse
Logitech Laser MX1000
Internet Speed
60/60
Antivirus
Bitdefender
Browser
Chrome
I don't see a problem. Why can't he just dual boot into the different OS's. There is no OEM limitation on this , or of having different OS's on different drives in the same system, that I'm aware of. The only OEM limitation is that he can't move the W7 install to another machine.
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP DV8t quad
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 (Retail)
CPU
i7-Q 720
Motherboard
Motherboard Chipset Intel Ibex Peak-M PM55, Intel Lynnfield
Memory
6 GB
Graphics Card(s)
nVidia GeForce GT 230M (1GB)
Sound Card
IDT High Definition Audio CODEC
Monitor(s) Displays
18.4 inch HP Infinity FHD (Samsung 184HT03-001)
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
Hitachi 500GB 7200 rpm (x2)
Seagate FreeAgent 1.5 TB External USB (x2)
Thermaltake BlacX eSATA/USB 2.0 3.5/2.5 HD dock
Cooling
Zalman NC-2000 notebook cooling pad
Keyboard
laptop
Mouse
Logitech VX Revolution
Other Info
Backup Unit: Lenovo T61p
Well, I do the same, but with a retail version of Windows 7 Ultimate. My reason is this:
Have got some nasty keyloggers in the past, so now I Ghost my PC every friday, by turning on my eSATA-HD, and let it boot from eSATA-drive, make a ghost image of my daily Windows 7, onto the eSATA. Shutting eSATA down, taking the power from eSATA, and boot my PC normally. This way, if I got a virus, malware, keylogger or anything else, I can be sure, that it is NOT on my eSATA, as it is only turned on while ghosting, and the netcard is deactivated, so nothing comes into the backup. Therefore I can always restore back to a 100% virusfree installation.

But yes, this requires 2 installations and 2 activations that will look different, as it is done on 2 different harddrives, so Iøm not sure about an OEM, but my retail-version did it without a problem. I think it is legal to do this.
 

My Computer

OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64
CPU
Intel E6850 3,0 running 3,6 Ghz
Motherboard
Gigabyte DS4 P35
Memory
2x2 and Gb Corsair PC6400 CAS5 - 4GB total
Graphics Card(s)
Nvidia Geforce 260GTX
Sound Card
Creative X-Fi Fata1ty Gamer Extreme
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung 2493hm
Screen Resolution
1920*1200
Hard Drives
Intel X25-M SSD for system
2x 1Tb Samsung F1 as seperate discs
PSU
Zahlman 850HP
Case
Shg
Cooling
Evo 120
Keyboard
Logitech G15 (blue backlight)
Mouse
Logitech G5 laser
Internet Speed
25/25 mbit
Other Info
1 Samsung SATA dvd-burner
1 LiteOn SATA dvd-burner
If you're worried about keyloggers, check out a free app called "Keyscrambler." It's my last line of defense against keyloggers. It encrypts your keystrokes so keyloggers can't get anything useful. They have paid versions that protect more apps but the free app protects the most important thing and that is your browser plus a few other apps. The premium paid version protects financial apps like quicken and MS Money as well. (Please don't forget to rep my post if you find this info useful.)

KeyScrambler Personal - Recommended by PC World's as one of the "15 Great, Free Privacy Downloads" - Protects your login credentials, credit card numbers, passwords, search terms, Java, Flash, PDF Forms, web email and more in IE, Firefox, and Flock against known and unknown keyloggers.Download Free
 

My Computer

Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
HP DV8t quad
OS
Windows 7 Ultimate x64 (Retail)
CPU
i7-Q 720
Motherboard
Motherboard Chipset Intel Ibex Peak-M PM55, Intel Lynnfield
Memory
6 GB
Graphics Card(s)
nVidia GeForce GT 230M (1GB)
Sound Card
IDT High Definition Audio CODEC
Monitor(s) Displays
18.4 inch HP Infinity FHD (Samsung 184HT03-001)
Screen Resolution
1920 x 1080
Hard Drives
Hitachi 500GB 7200 rpm (x2)
Seagate FreeAgent 1.5 TB External USB (x2)
Thermaltake BlacX eSATA/USB 2.0 3.5/2.5 HD dock
Cooling
Zalman NC-2000 notebook cooling pad
Keyboard
laptop
Mouse
Logitech VX Revolution
Other Info
Backup Unit: Lenovo T61p
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