There won't be any differences in actual use, but if you contact support about an OEM copy they would ask you to contact your manufacturer. If you bought it off Amazon for ~$100 it's most likely a retail copy. If you got it somewhere else for a lot less, it's likely you got an OEM copy,
25€ is a whole different issue.Well, I got it from somewhere else for 25€. But they said it’s a retail license. Isn’t there any way that I could actually check this out?
That is exactly 100% incorrect.Doesn't matter anymore. Windows 10 ties itself to the mobo it was installed on. You're not going to be able to carry a retail license to a new machine like you could with Win7 and earlier.
found this cmd line string and, tested it on my own system, and it does properly ID it as a retail version on my own rig...(a pop up windows is displayed with info regarding WIndows version/ type, licensed, etc...)
open windows cmd prompt , and type: SLMGR -DLI
(note, space after 'R'...caps not required, i merely used them to avoid ambiguity/confusion between 1,L, etc...
https://www.tenforums.com/tutorials/49586-determine-if-windows-license-type-oem-retail-volume.html
After the v1607 Win 10 release, you can link the Digital License to your Microsoft account.Care to enlighten me then?
retail can be reactivated a few times with new parts far easier (i.e, without calling MS and begging for it) than w/ OEM....
(I'd be skeptical of any keys/codes obtained for $25, however....; but, in any event, the above cmd string will tell you what Windows itself thinks it is, retail vs. OEM)
Good to know! I guess I fell behind the times.After the v1607 Win 10 release, you can link the Digital License to your Microsoft account.
Later, you can move that license to different hardware.
It is linked to the MS account, rather than the specific motherboard.
Reactivating after a hardware change
https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/20530/windows-10-reactivating-after-hardware-change
This does NOT work if it is a preinstalled Win 10, like from Dell or HP.
Retail versions are “for life” on any computer. My Windows is RETAIL, though I only payed 25€ for it, after all! 😀
A $25 license, who cares if it’s retail or not. The real question is will MS figure out it’s a grey market code and deactivate it. Can take years for them to catch up but they are known to do this.
Well, that’s actually, not true! The license ain’t “gray”! It is a real one and it’s been provided to me by a company that bought hundreds of retail licenses for a very low price, and later realised that they don’t need so many, so they decided to sell some of them out.
Well, I got it from somewhere else for 25€. But they said it’s a retail license. Isn’t there any way that I could actually check this out?
Well, that’s actually, not true! The license ain’t “gray”! It is a real one and it’s been provided to me by a company that bought hundreds of retail licenses for a very low price, and later realised that they don’t need so many, so they decided to sell some of them out.
OK.....I have legit retail w10 on all but 1 of my family members' machines.launch a command prompt window with administrator rights, then change the directory to c:\windows\system32\sysprep and type sysprep. there should be a screen and a checkbox that says "enter out of box expedience (OOBE)" and check it. If it is a store bought, it will dismount the drivers, that when you reboot on the same machine, will install them back. Only the store bought version will allow you to migrate the OS to a new machine.