Microsoft is keen to point out that this isn’t a move to the same activation system used in Vista, whereby keys expire if they’re re-used. As with Vista, you can now install the OS without one and you’ll be prompted to provide it later. You should find you no longer need to enter a product key. There’s a further change you won’t see if you’re updating an existing installation it’ll only be apparent when you install XP from a CD with SP3 already integrated. If you’ve installed IE7 manually, that will be updated too. If you have IE6, that’s what you’ll still have after the update, albeit fully patched. In fact, SP3 is so determined not to give you anything new it won’t even install the latest version of Internet Explorer. With SP3, the primary focus is rolling up the hundreds of hotfixes and security patches that have been released in the years since SP2, giving a more secure baseline installation.
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