I am, because i see all the data thats exchanged between the two. Whats transmitted, for instance, is the PC Name and the PID. Yep, it was the emu. (The one from LocalHost, to be precise.) I dont touch public hosts, so that honour would fall to somebody else. Sorry.
I saw the public server PID in there but could not find the CMID. There were lots of unintelligible stuff there but stuff like port, PID, client PC name were all clear text. Makes me wonder how the CMID is used then, it has to send something based off of it if it is used to ID. Maybe it is only sent if needed. Most hosts have a queue of 5 but the host I used is not well known but lets me use it anytime.
Told you so. Better stop listening to that other guy because it is quite obvious that he has very little idea of what he is talking about. (First the non-working PIDs, then the mis-info about the CMID and god knows what other ideas he put in your head...) Good question. Like i said, that stuff is way more complicated than it would appear to somebody who hasnt spent a lot of time with it. And its not a surprise - after all the Microsoft guys arent exactly amateurs either. See you later - gotta go offline now...
Amazing, simply amazing. This toolkit really made my day. I was a little bit confused in the beginning because I didn't notice the "Readme" button. Probably the easiest toolkit and activator for Office 2010. Repped, btw.
Yes, Definately the problem is with keygen. A legit KMS host never generates an invalid response to a KMS request.
As I already said, there is NO blacklisting, It is just a PID/CMID combination that causes the bug to surface.
Yes, you are right. But for ZWT keygen, if you could once activate with a combination of CMID/PID, you will never get persistent error. You may need to try several times because of timestamp but error does not persist.
It's because the new CMID/PID combination causes the problem to surface too. But if you change CMID several times, you will be able to activate.
Right, but why only 5? even if there is less rearms left, you can make a backup when CMID is still null and restore it as many times as you want.
What?!!! It is being transmitted from client to host in the encrypted part of the activation request. CMID is used by host to identify and to count the number of clients. MS clearly stated that! The fact that you can't find it in unencrypted part of the request does NOT mean that it is not being sent.
Be respectful man. You are being rude. Go read forum rules, coz the way you are talking is gonna get you banned. Do some more readings on KMS and talk later. Do you really think that if you can't find something in plain text that means that it is not being transmitted?
@letsgoawayhell I think you just posted 11 times in a row...lol Can you do multi-quote in one post please Next time just go to first post you want to respond to and then click every check mark at bottom right of posts then at last post you want to respond to click "reply with quote" Thanks
We are assuming at this point a nice backup tool wasn't made or used. Leaving rearm to itself gives only 5 shots.