I recently purchased a new motherboard and CPU for a secondary PC to replace my old pre-built secondary PC (I dislike most things about that system) and used a spare unused retail copy of Windows 10 Home I had laying around and installed Windows 11 Home on my new secondary PC. On the 2nd day I used my new system, Windows 11 Home deactivated itself and when I enter they key in the troubleshooting section it says that it cannot be activated because this key is being used by another device. About 5 days ago I returned a defective motherboard to the store for a refund and that motherboard was used with my retail copy key of Windows 10 Home. I re-entered the same key during the installation on my new motherboard and CPU but the activation didn't last for more than 2 days, then I get a pop-up saying that Windows 11 is not activated. This is not the first time this has happened either. This happened before with my main system that had my retail copy of Windows 10 Pro key (installed as Windows 11 Pro) and reinstalling Windows 11 Pro and re-entering my Windows 10 Pro activation key solved that issue on that system, but on this system I did enter the Windows 10 Home activation key when Windows 11 setup prompted for my activation key. Is this because the motherboard I returned to the store possibly was actually put back on the shelf and someone bought it, noticed it was open-boxed, got a good deal on it, and tested to see if a Windows 11 Home (from my Windows 10 Home key) was tied to the motherboard, and now there is a conflict with my new motherboard and that motherboard I returned, resulting in the deactivation of retail Windows 11 Home (from my retail Windows 10 Home key) on my new motherboard? Was it because I was using a Windows 10 Home key to activate Windows 11 Home, and maybe Microsoft took away capability of Windows 10 keys to activate Windows 11 (They did this with Windows 7 to 8.1 keys to activate Windows 10 last year from what I understand). Now, those Windows 11 Pro OEM keys that are less than $30 that I find digital stores selling online, If I purchase one, after I enter the activation key during the setup of the operating system, would it be tied to the motherboard for good and would never have an issue with the operating system deactivating itself and it would never prompt me again for an activation key if I ever decided to reinstall that copy of Windows 11 Pro OEM that I activated the first time I installed the operating system? This is how it is on a pre-built system I have that came with Windows 11 Pro (OEM license), it does not ask for an activation key when I perform a clean reinstall of the operating system on that specific system, and activates no problem, and I'm just wondering if those cheap OEM keys work the same way?
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