[SOLVED] I guess no one has ever solved the multiple Licensing checks every time you open up Word, Excel, etc... Any news?. Any new thoughts?

pcumming

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Dec 27, 2007
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I guess no one has ever solved the multiple Licensing checks every time you open up Word, Excel, etc... Any news?. Any new thoughts?


Every time I open up an Office application I will receive the below in Event Viewer. I have fiddled with various registry entries, changing times for certain amount of delay or waiting 86400 seconds before running (in registry) and task scheduler entries but the event still shows up every time I open any Office application that is properly licensed.

Thanks
Peter
 
Solution
is it causing any actual errors?

A lot of the errors in event viewer can be ignored, they may be 1 time errors that fix themselves later, even if they are constant like all the Esent ones, you can ignore them unless you actually getting a noticeable performance gap.

You’re sure to see some errors and warnings in Event Viewer, even if your computer is working fine.

The Event Viewer is designed to help system administrators keep tabs on their computers and troubleshoot problems. If there isn’t a problem with your computer, the errors in here are unlikely to be important. For example, you’ll often see errors that indicate a program crashed at a specific time—which may have been weeks ago—or that a service failed to start with...
I forgot the event viewer log, sorry.

The Software Protection service has completed licensing status check. Application Id=0ff1ce15-a989-479d-af46-f275c6370663 Licensing Status= 1: c47456e3-265d-47b6-8ca0-c30abbd0ca36, 1, 0 [(0 [0xC004F014, 0, 0], [(?)(?)(?)(?)(?)(?)(?)(?)])(1 )(2 )] 2: d450596f-894d-49e0-966a-fd39ed4c4c64, 1, 1 [(0 [0x00000000, 1, 0], [(?)( 1 0x00000000)(?)( 2 0x00000000 0 0 msft:rm/algorithm/volume/1.0 0x00000000 259116)(?)(?)(?)(?)])(1 )(2 )]
 
is it causing any actual errors?

A lot of the errors in event viewer can be ignored, they may be 1 time errors that fix themselves later, even if they are constant like all the Esent ones, you can ignore them unless you actually getting a noticeable performance gap.

You’re sure to see some errors and warnings in Event Viewer, even if your computer is working fine.

The Event Viewer is designed to help system administrators keep tabs on their computers and troubleshoot problems. If there isn’t a problem with your computer, the errors in here are unlikely to be important. For example, you’ll often see errors that indicate a program crashed at a specific time—which may have been weeks ago—or that a service failed to start with Windows, but was likely started on a subsequent attempt.
https://www.howtogeek.com/123646/ht...ndows-event-viewer-is-and-how-you-can-use-it/
 
Solution