Deactivation on broken machines
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 646 posts since 27 Apr, 2018
Hi,
I have now 2 activations on „broken“ machines.
First got broken, when my Mac did an uprade from MacOS 10.13 to 10.14.
Second was now after sending it to get repaired and and restoring the backup.
On iLok I had the same problem, but at least you can get in contact with the vendors and let set the activations back manually.
But for Sylent there is just this set-back-link, which can be used 10 times and which I regard as kind of unfair. I mean, when I transfer a license from an old computer to a new one, it can expected from me that I take care to deactivate the old license properly.
But that activations get lost because of updates or backup restores, I don‘t see, why this should be on my shoulders, when activations get broken and then I wikk have once a license which is useless, because I can‘t activate it on new computers anymore.
So my question is, if there is a way to set these broken machines manually back, without reducing the counter by 2, because it‘s actually running on the same HW.
BR
I have now 2 activations on „broken“ machines.
First got broken, when my Mac did an uprade from MacOS 10.13 to 10.14.
Second was now after sending it to get repaired and and restoring the backup.
On iLok I had the same problem, but at least you can get in contact with the vendors and let set the activations back manually.
But for Sylent there is just this set-back-link, which can be used 10 times and which I regard as kind of unfair. I mean, when I transfer a license from an old computer to a new one, it can expected from me that I take care to deactivate the old license properly.
But that activations get lost because of updates or backup restores, I don‘t see, why this should be on my shoulders, when activations get broken and then I wikk have once a license which is useless, because I can‘t activate it on new computers anymore.
So my question is, if there is a way to set these broken machines manually back, without reducing the counter by 2, because it‘s actually running on the same HW.
BR
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- KVRian
- 1304 posts since 25 Sep, 2006
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- KVRAF
- 35569 posts since 11 Apr, 2010 from Germany
Even if it was "only" 10 times, I find that plenty.
Frankly, I have no idea how you always run into situations where you can't "recue" an activation anymore. Unless your computer breaks down the whole time due to defective hardware, I just can't see how your activations always get borked again and again. Just to compare: So far, I needed exactly zero of those reset links.
Frankly, I have no idea how you always run into situations where you can't "recue" an activation anymore. Unless your computer breaks down the whole time due to defective hardware, I just can't see how your activations always get borked again and again. Just to compare: So far, I needed exactly zero of those reset links.
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 646 posts since 27 Apr, 2018
OK thanks for the fast reply. With that, I can live and that's fair then.
Well, I described, how it happened, above. I speak now about 2 activations in 3 years and indeed - in one case, a broken HW was the root cause, even with backuped and restored SW. That you needed exactly zero resets makes you a nice guy, I guess.chk071 wrote: ↑Mon Nov 30, 2020 10:52 am Even if it was "only" 10 times, I find that plenty.
Frankly, I have no idea how you always run into situations where you can't "recue" an activation anymore. Unless your computer breaks down the whole time due to defective hardware, I just can't see how your activations always get borked again and again. Just to compare: So far, I needed exactly zero of those reset links.