:: What's New? ::
- No booting text from Vista Bios emulator
- 100% faster to activate
- Automated script
- Advanced Install Script (Detects almost all problems)
- New High Quality menu
- CleanTool (Cleans all previous activation cracks)
- Lightweight and silent activation
:: Supported OS ::
- Windows Vista Ultimate
- Windows Vista Business
- Windows Vista Enterprise
- Windows Vista Home Premium
- Windows Vista Home Basic
- Windows Vista Starter
- Windows Server 2008 Standard
- Windows Server 2008 Enterprise
- Windows Server 2008 Datacenter
- Windows Server 2003 (All)
- Windows Home Server
- Windows 7 Build 7100 or later
- Windows XP Home
- Windows XP Professional
- Windows XP Media Center Edition 2002
- Windows XP Media Center Edition 2005
All Service Packs or Power Packs are supported
All OS in x32(x86)Bit and x64(x64)Bit are supported
[There is a X64 problem found in this program, so doesn't work]
Experimental for: Windows Server 2008 R2
:: Tested OS ::
- Windows Vista Ultimate SP1
- Windows Vista Enterprise SP2 x86
- Windows XP Pro SP3
- Windows Home Server PP1
- Windows 7 Build 7100 RC
- Windows Server 2008 Enteprise SP1
:: What uses this activator? ::
- Vista Loader V4.9.7
- Server 2008 OEM activator
- Windows XP ntuser crack
- Windows 7 RC activator
Download Now
Wednesday
Windows 7 Activator ALL-OS Ultimate Edition
Posted by Rajender at 5:04 PM 0 comments
Tuesday
Microsoft releases new virtual machine management software
Microsoft Corp. Thursday released its first software designed specifically to manage virtual machines on a network, and tweaked licensing for its system management products to take into account virtualization.
System Center Virtual Machine Manager 2007, which has been in the works for about a year and a half, has been released to manufacturing and will be generally available in October as part of Microsoft's System Server Management Center suite of products, the company said.
The new product is built on the same architecture as other products in the enterprise version of the suite -- which include Data Protection Manager, Operations Manager and Configuration Manager -- and is aimed specifically at managing virtual machines in a data center that runs Microsoft Virtual Server 2005 R2, the current version of Microsoft's server virtualization technology, said Patrick O'Rourke, group manager of Windows Infrastructure.
"Customers now can use the same tools to manage both virtual and physical assets [on the network]," he said.
Microsoft also has changed the licensing model for its for its System Center Server Management Suite Enterprise, making it available for $860 per host server -- which means the actual server that hosts any instances of virtual software -- plus two years of Microsoft's Software Assurance plan. Previously, System Center software was licensed per device being managed in the data center, O'Rourke said. The new licensing should make managing virtualized environments with Microsoft's software more cost-effective for customers, he said.
Microsoft has been developing and fine-tuning its virtualization strategy over the past several years to keep up with virtualization leader VMware Inc. and others, as well as to serve the needs of large customers who increasingly are using virtualization in their data centers. However, the company's strategy has predictably hit some road bumps.
Microsoft is developing next-generation virtualization technology, code-named Viridian, that takes advantage of virtualization-optimized processors from Intel Corp. and Advanced Micro Devices Inc. and will help keep the company up to speed with competitors. However, though Viridian will be a component of Windows Server 2008, it won't be available until six months after that new operating system is released. And since Microsoft recently pushed back the release of Windows Server 2008 to the first quarter of next year, Viridian's release is nearly a year away. The company also decided earlier this year to pull out some originally planned features of Viridian because of timing concerns.
In the meantime, customers can use a combination of Microsoft's stand-alone Virtual Server and its System Center products to install and manage both virtual and physical machines in the data center. Microsoft also is planning a midmarket version of Virtual Machine Manager, called Workgroup edition, for release in January. The software will cost $499 per host server.
Microsoft also plans to extend the capabilities of the next version of Virtual Machine Manager so that it not only supports Windows Server virtualization technologies but also third-party virtualization from VMware and XenSource Inc., O'Rourke said. A beta of that software is expected to be available around the same time as Windows Server 2008, and Microsoft plans to update its road map then as well.
Posted by Rajender at 2:37 PM 0 comments
Labels: Virtual Servers, W, Windows