I am a licensed owner of PowerDVD 6 Deluxe which I purchased in May of 2005. Vista listed PowerDVD 6 as a version that was not compatible or had known issues with Vista...thus I forked out another $29.99 to get a version that works with Vista.
So, I go to install the downloaded copy of PowerDVD 7 Deluxe and as I feared, I was going to have to install the incompatible version of 6. Once I started version 6 to register, after submitting my registration info, I get this bogus error message that I'm not connected to the internet. Bogus because a) I have an always on connection and b) I disabled the Windows Firewall. After doing some snooping around via Google, I got the idea to disable the UAC process in Vista (User Account Control). After rebooting, then launching PowerDVD 6 again, I filled out the registration form and sure enough, the registration info successfully submitted. (note that I've already registered the product previously so I assumed this was merely a formality so that all the pieces would be in place for me to install the upgrade)
With that hurdle cleared, I went on to install the upgrade (version 7).
As expected, the previous version was detected and I was prompted to remove it. This seem to work as expected. After the install completed, I went to launch version 7. I'm immediately presented with the activation screen. Fair enough, I enter my activation key, the Activate button "enables" itself and so I click it.
An error message...I'm getting used to this now.
"You cannot upgrade PowerDVD 7 because you do not have Administrator privileges on this computer."
Well isn't that a load of crap. The account that I am logged in as is indeed a Local Admin and furthermore, I have disabled UAC anticipating that the install programs may be poorly coded to account for these new permission considerations.
So, I decide to humor the Cyberlink install by launching the the Cyberlink app by selecting "Launch as Adminstrator" from the right-click menu. No go.
So, I decide to login as the big kahuna, the Administrator account. Then I launch PowerDVD 7. I fill out the activation form...again. Again, I am told I don't have administrative privileges.
So, I uninstall and reinstall ensuring that I run both installs "as Administrator" by selecting "Run as Administrator" via the right-click menu option on the EXE from the file system.
Same crap, same error message.
I've performed all kinds of searches against the forum, the knowledge base and NOTHING comes up. Stuff like "cannot upgrade", "Administrator privileges", etc. No hits.
I have a ticket in with Cyberlink but thought I would retype my story all over again in the event that someone else has run into this.
Obviously, I'm about ready to punt Cyberlink and request a refund for the upgrade that I was essentially forced into purchasing. I'll sleep on it but all in all, this experience has been a futile, frustrating waste of time.
Perhaps with my background being in IT (10+ years of software testing), I'm thinking too hard about this situation and am overlooking something simple...so please...if there is a simple explanation and a workaround for what I'm experiencing, enlighten me.
However, I'm more inclined to believe this whole upgrading process and structure is ridiculous and I'm inclined to believe the installation was not vetted sufficiently against Vista's various flavors. If so, that's rather ridiculous since the testing platform has been available for almost a year. I'm in software development myself by trade and I understand what it takes to get software ready for new platforms. Good design anticipates bad decisions by users and thus should prevent users from going down rabbit holes. Even so, I really don't think I made any boneheaded decisions with regards to the prompts and literature that was presented during this install/research adventure. Have I dialed up a one in a million scenario and I'm unlucky? I ask, how uncommon is it for a person to be in my situation.
[*]Owner of PowerDVD 6 in XP Pro
[*]Upgrades OS to Vista Business (clean install)
[*]Wants to install PowerDVD 6 but knows that is incompatible.
[*]Purchases upgrade to "Vista compatible" version 7.
[*]Installs incompatible version
[*]Installs upgrade to make it compatible
Is that really so far-fetched? Is this test case not present in Cyberlink's volume of test cases?
What am I missing here?
This message was edited 5 times. Last update was at Feb 04. 2007 18:25