Slipstreaming Windows

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M$ should have known that people slipstreaming Doz on their licensed copy of XP that M$ screw innocent people into thinking they're a pirate.

Catty

So that being say, there's no way to slipstreaming a licensed copy of XP. Slipstreaming might have been successful but the licensed copy is not. Only if I could find a way to make the webcam to work on my Ubuntu.

Not true, I had slipstream the licensed copy of XP and installed so successfully since I have valid license for XP.

Slipstream has nothing to cause any piracy of software but just only license issue, MS has blocked the varies of license.
 
That's my point, the installation from slipstreaming was successful but the update was blocked after that because of invalid copy licence.Without slipstreaming, it works fine. Werid.
 
That's my point, the installation from slipstreaming was successful but the update was blocked after that because of invalid copy licence.Without slipstreaming, it works fine. Werid.

Some files in XP CD might have been deleted or replaced by Service Pack slipstream that might have changed and didn't match the rest of XP's files's "code". It might have caused problem with update. Call M$ to see if there a way to fix the problem while keeping slipstreamed copy.

Catty
 
That's my point, the installation from slipstreaming was successful but the update was blocked after that because of invalid copy licence.Without slipstreaming, it works fine. Werid.

then you need slipstream Windows XP with SP2, that it and you can update to SP3 after installation.

If no then just put original XP CD and need floppy disk for SATA driver, in case if XP CD don't include SATA driver.

I had slipstream the SATA driver with XP CD and it work so fine.
 
then you need slipstream Windows XP with SP2, that it and you can update to SP3 after installation.

If no then just put original XP CD and need floppy disk for SATA driver, in case if XP CD don't include SATA driver.

I had slipstream the SATA driver with XP CD and it work so fine.

So in theory, I can slipstream the original SP1 and SP2 but not SP3 cause there something wrong with the SP3 that keep it from updating which turn it into a "invalid license" like Catty say?
 
So in theory, I can slipstream the original SP1 and SP2 but not SP3 cause there something wrong with the SP3 that keep it from updating which turn it into a "invalid license" like Catty say?

Yup, you should slipstream XP CD that is all included as original, such as if SP2 is included in pre-installed then don't slipstream SP3.
 
Uh Foxrac - that only applies if you try to slipstream XP's service packs *on* Vista.

I have the slipstreamed XP Pro SP3 (that was slipstreamed on XP to begin with) installed on a Virtual PC (just to test it out, that's it), and it works fine.
 
Uh Foxrac - that only applies if you try to slipstream XP's service packs *on* Vista.

I have the slipstreamed XP Pro SP3 (that was slipstreamed on XP to begin with) installed on a Virtual PC (just to test it out, that's it), and it works fine.
I did the same metod you did on XP to begin with and was successfully, however it comes with a price when slipstraming to SP3, the update will stop working with a warning "Invalid key". Somehow they blacklist on all slipstreamed SP3, expect SP2
 
Uh Foxrac - that only applies if you try to slipstream XP's service packs *on* Vista.

I have the slipstreamed XP Pro SP3 (that was slipstreamed on XP to begin with) installed on a Virtual PC (just to test it out, that's it), and it works fine.

I'm not talking about related to Vista.

Look at Nathan's post about activation issue after slipstream SP3 on XP.

I never bother to slipstream any SP3 into XP CD with SP2, only for SATA drivers and download SP3 after installation OS over.
 
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