Updated: July 9, 2020 (December 4, 2006)
Charts & IllustrationsMAK Proxy Activation
Administrators can use a Multiple Activation Key (MAK) proxy computer to manage the activation of 25 or fewer computers by following these steps:
(1) The administrator gets a MAK with a specific number of activations from eOpen, Microsoft Volume Licensing Services (MVLS), or MSDN and installs the Volume Activation Management Tool (VAMT) on a computer running Windows Vista. (In the future, a Windows 2003 or Windows Server “Longhorn” server will also be able to serve as the MAK proxy.)
(2) The administrator can use the VAMT, Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI), Group Policy (GP), Systems Management Server (SMS), and scripts to begin activation by collecting the Installation Identifier (IID), which is a hash generated from the Vista Product Key and hardware ID (a numeric identifier generated by polling hardware components).
(3) The MAK proxy computer, which is running the VAMT, uploads the MAK information and the IID for each computer being activated to Microsoft activation servers.
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