Sysprep on the same image, apparently. Can only be done a few times and any more than the max and it fails, according to my coworker who taught me how to use this thing.
Really weird utility in Windows but I’m guessing it’s done to prevent people from pirating the OS or something.
Sysprep can reset the activation clock a max number of 3 times. You can set SkipRearm to 1 and it no longer does this, but of course the activation clock isn’t reset, which ‘defeats’ continued reactivation.
You learn something new every day I guess.
See Serverfault - Does doing sysprep too many times cause issues?
Sysprep on the same image, apparently. Can only be done a few times and any more than the max and it fails, according to my coworker who taught me how to use this thing.
Really weird utility in Windows but I’m guessing it’s done to prevent people from pirating the OS or something.
Sysprep can reset the activation clock a max number of 3 times. You can set SkipRearm to 1 and it no longer does this, but of course the activation clock isn’t reset, which ‘defeats’ continued reactivation. You learn something new every day I guess. See Serverfault - Does doing sysprep too many times cause issues?