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The Web Jedi

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Jedi Meditations

March 2007 - Posts

  • Bitten By Windows Genuine Advantage

    Last weekend I was home doing some paperwork and I had to send a fax to my insurance agent. I hadn't sent a fax in several months and not since I had reimaged my computer with Vista and Office 2007. So I opened Word and looked in the templates for a fax cover page. Word ships with several templates as standard, but it also includes a link to an Internet-based gallery of templates. I selected one of the Internet-based templates and was informed that this feature required that Microsoft verify that my Office installation was "genuine." Sure, whatever, I thought to myself and I hit the "Continue" button. To my shock, Office reported that the validation had failed! My Office installation wasn't genuine!


    That's odd, I mumbled. There's a link that takes you to a more detailed explanation of what is wrong with the validation. I clicked on it and the resulting web page told me my Office installation hadn't been activated yet. It said all I had to do to fix it was run any Office app and it would automatically start the activation process. I shook my head and cursed at Microsoft for inflicting this garbage on me. I double-checked Word and sure enough, it claimed that it was already activated. So I concluded that Microsoft's "genuine" validation routine was on crack. I get all my Microsoft software directly from MSDN, so there's no way my Office installation was phony.


    I futzed around with the web site a bit more trying to figure out how I could convince the Great Genuine Validation Gods that I didn't steal this copy of Office. No go. I called the tech support number and was quickly transferred to another call center because I got my copy from MSDN. This new call center told me they couldn't help me on the weekend unless my "business" was experiencing a Severity One emergency. Call back Monday, he said. I was irked as hell about this but there was little I could do. So I hauled out my laptop which had Office installed from the exact same CD. It worked fine, I got my stupid template, and I sent my fax.


    Due to my employer's current MSDN configuration, it was difficult for me to log a support incident with Microsoft about this so I didn't bother looking at it again until this evening. I suspected that something went awry with my Office install on Vista so I set about trying to "repair" it from the CD. Nope, no good. I was getting ready to uninstall and reinstall as a last resort when I remembered that I had installed Microsoft Project 2007 at the same time I had installed Office Professional, but I had never run Project at all. Hmmm, I thought to myself, I'll bet the Genuine Gods are pissed off because I've never run Project, so they're not going to let me into their special Internet club! So I ran Project (which installed using a different product key than Office and thus needs its own activation), it immediately wanted to be activated, I activated it and promptly closed it. I went back into Word, tried to open an Internet-based template, went through the "Genuine" validation voodoo, and it worked!


    So, my question to Microsoft is: Why the hell did I have to active Microsoft Project so that I could download a Word template? In what twisted demon dimension does this bent logic make any sense? Good grief. (But I still think the Ribbon interface is way cool.)

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