thanks for your proposal. I did download a second iso, with different
key. Same problem.
Will contact qnx support.
By the way, the key works on one very old pentium motherboard (Some
unknown small IPC, not ASUS based) with 400 MHz and only 128 MB of RAM,
that of course cannot be used for proper evaluation…
thanks for your proposal. I did download a second iso, with different key.
Same problem.
Will contact qnx support.
By the way, the key works on one very old pentium motherboard (Some
unknown small IPC, not ASUS based) with 400 MHz and only 128 MB of RAM,
that of course cannot be used for proper evaluation…
Yes, sure, one can contact the distributor and wait 5 years till someone
replies (no offense intended). Sorry, usualy people do not have time for
this.
It is also very obvious the problem is not related to the date in the bios
since Gerhard properly indicates in his original post “Date is ok in BIOS”
(would be nice if ppl who post replies actualy would READ the question
before jumping to conclusions (again no offense intended).
Downloading the ISO anew and thus receiving a new serial key is the fastest
way (if you have the bandwidth to do so available).
Gerhard did so, and it does NOT resolve his problem.
Therefore, the problem is not related to the key but to an internal problem
with QNX and/or the hardware he is using.
The distributor will not be able to help on this one. Contacting support@qnx.com would be the correct next logical step in this process.
Regards,
Eric
“Alex/Systems 104” <acellarius@yah0o.lsd.com> wrote in message
news:op.szvpaaaqbinb6v@alex-pentium-m…
PS There is no need to download the ISO just
for the password.
Contact your distributor, they can request
a license to be sent to you.
I have the same problem as Gerhard Heidkamp. I got in touch with QNX
support, his answer only was the license key was correct and I should
try to change the date in the BIOS. Of course it didn’t work.
Really I start to think there is a bug on the license key validation
or QNX cannot access to my BIOS in order to get the current date.
I have the same problem as Gerhard Heidkamp. I got in touch with QNX
support, his answer only was the license key was correct and I should
try to change the date in the BIOS. Of course it didn’t work.
Really I start to think there is a bug on the license key validation
or QNX cannot access to my BIOS in order to get the current date.
Still waiting for some examples.
Knowing exactly at what point it indicates the license is expired, with
character-for-character the context and error message displayed, might help.
Definitely also boot from CD (if this is self-hosted) and run from CD
(instead of installing) in order to run the ‘date’ utility to determine what
Neutrino thinks the system time is.
I have the same problem as Gerhard Heidkamp. I got in touch with QNX
support, his answer only was the license key was correct and I should
try to change the date in the BIOS. Of course it didn’t work.
Really I start to think there is a bug on the license key validation
or QNX cannot access to my BIOS in order to get the current date.