Windows Vista Cracked Pirated Edition

When they say China is a land of pirated DVDs, they are 100% right about it. Microsoft only sold a measly 244 copies of Windows Vista in China, during the two week period after its launch. The best part is, Microsoft spend millions of dollars to promote Windows Vista, I guess Bill Gates and gang got it all wrong about pricing, would you buy a $1 pirated DVD or a $200 dollars original DVD?
According to source, the average income per household in China is about $200 and to spend one month hard earn money on a DVD is ridiculous. It is about time Microsoft price their product accordingly to a country’s economic, after all it is better to make a million dollars than none.
p.s. These guys made a typo error, it reads “Ulimate”
Tags: Microsoft, Vista Chinese Edition Crack, Vista Chinese Edition Serial, Vista Keygen, Vista Serial, Windows Vista ChinaTool Cracks Windows Vista Activation
A website post a new way to work around the Windows Vista activation code, simply by applying brute force and pray hard that it doesn’t consume too much time to come up with a valid Windows Vista key. According to source, the keygen is able to generate about 20,000 keys an hour, that is alot of key but – it would take 1.35 quintillion years — that’s 1,351,869,740,791,670,000 years to be exact — for the tool to find a possible key combinations, which is equivalent to finding water on another plant.
The question is, what if someone found a valid key and use it and the legitimate user which bought the original Windows Vista could find his or her key unusable, this could create a tsunami of customer problems for Microsoft, and when Bill Gates and gang is angry, they are a mean bunch of people. This prompt the creator of the keygen to post a sorry note, saying that he regret his action – which if the keygen to create problems for Microsoft, I doubt Microsoft and gang would accept that little note.

“I regret the fact that it has been leaked all over the Net, which I guess was to be expected. I simply love Windows Vista, and I happened to stumble upon this trick. I seriously believe that everyone should stop spreading this idea around and stop using the brute force KeyGen altogether because it takes away from legitimate customers.”
A normal computer has the ability to generate about 20,000 keys an hour, but what if a hacker has access to a super comp, let says a worker in one of the HP’s rendering farm that has hundreds of super comp linking together, or access to Google’s super computer? Won’t this super comp fasten the process and generate millions of keys per hour? Just Imagine. Microsoft would be in deep trouble.
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