I do in CMD: cscript "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office16\OSPP.VBS" /dstatus it gives me "last 5 character of installed product key" how to get the complete key ?
No I just want to find the installed key... when I do this in CMD : cscript "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Office\Office16\OSPP.VBS" /dstatus It gives me the last 5 chars of the installed product key... i just want the 25 chars of the key ! Spoiler C:\Windows\system32>cscript "c:\program files\microsoft office\office16\ospp.vbs" /dstatus Microsoft (R) Windows Script Host Version 5.812 Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation. Tous droits réservés. ---Processing-------------------------- --------------------------------------- PRODUCT ID: 00469-55000-43509-AA303 SKU ID: 8d77de46-78fb-428d-b8c4-c4a078e8912d LICENSE NAME: Office 21, Office21ProPlus2021MSDNR_Retail edition LICENSE DESCRIPTION: Office 21, RETAIL channel BETA EXPIRATION: 01/01/1601 LICENSE STATUS: ---LICENSED--- Last 5 characters of installed product key: 4GGWK --------------------------------------- --------------------------------------- ---Exiting-----------------------------
Where did you get this key? This is not a genuine Retail version key. This is one of the many keys shared on Chinese Internet sites, and this key has now been used the maximum times. So, it should be some kind of multiactivation key. So you even realize it's not the Retail Key.
Seems something someone will search around, is there any other way to execute the command line without having to run the command (Win+R) or cmd.exe?
That is not the correct answer. Though I do not know how it can be done, but what you replied with does not answer the question above, mate.
What will the Terminal Result look like instead when it is a Genuine Retail key, any examples? Also what exactly in that terminal result shared by OP shows that it is one of those cheap ones available everywhere?
Also does the MSDN in the License Name refer to MSDN account/subscription, and the keys are taken from there?
What are you trying to communicate? Various utilities look for the full Office 2010 key. For newer versions, the key is requested from the system via WMI. From there, only the last 5 digits are extracted. If you were able to get the full key, then it is unnecessary to indicate links and names of programs. Attach a screenshot of a program with the result and the name of Microsoft Office, indicating its version.
> As know, impossible. Microsoft does not store the full key on the system. = Key finders wont work ?