As long as you have a license for each machine it’s running on, yes. This is exactly how the IT departments of large companies do it; they create a standard build for each type/role of computer, image it, then blow that image onto the target machines.
MM
Ask Microsoft. Probably not unless you have a MSDN account that covers multiple machines.
I should amplify that - you’re entitled to a separate deployment per license key. But in practice you’ll find that if you intend to use Windows Update to stay current with security patches (HIGHLY recommended) it’ll only allow one machine to be registered per license key. SYSPREP is the way around that. Hope that helps.
We cover 10 machines per subscription to MSDN but it’s expensive. The same disk can be used up to 10 different MAC addresses.
This does not happens with Vista's Windows Mail, Can any Freepers solve this mystery???
You can, as long as you change the CD key to a licensed key and re-activate. There are programs like keyfinder.exe that enable changing the CD key.
Screw Microsnot! I’m loving Linux more each day.
If your Windows license is an OEM license, then it’s illegal to deploy your Windows installation CD in a virtualized environment (VirtualBox, VMWare, Win4Lin, Parallels, etc.). If your Windows license is from a copy of Windows that you purchased in a store, then it’s technically legal as long as you are not running another computer using Windows installed from that CD.