The last three digits determines what CD key it will accept. ![]() The first five digits determines how the CD will behave, ie is it a retail cd that lets you clean install or upgrade, or an oem cd that only lets you perform a clean install? There are special numbers that determine if it’s a retail, oem, or volume license edition.įirst, we break down that number into two parts. What’s there now looks like a standard default. ![]() Open it up, it’ll look something like this: ExtraData=736F696F697911AE7E05 Pid=55034000 The Pid value is what we’re interested in. IE is it an OEM version or retail? First, find your setupp.ini file in the i386 directory on your WinXP CD. ![]() Unlocking WinXP’s setupp.ini WinXP’s setupp.ini controls how the CD acts. With these instructions you can change your Windows XP installation media to allow OEM, Retail, or Volume License product keys.
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