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Migration to SSD with MS Office 2013 installed

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I plan to install MS Office 2013 on my new Dell XPS desktop. I also plan to migrate from hdd to ssd in the near future via Acronis disk clone. My question is: Given MS's tedious and aggravating policy of "one computer for life" for this office suite, is there a chance that the program will recognize the migration as a reinstall to another computer and thereby disable itself? Does anyone know how MS Office 2013 identifies a computer as the one it was installed on? Motherboard, CPU or harddrive? And has anyone done this before and run into issues? Thanks in advance.

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My experience with Office installations (going way back) has been that Microsoft seems to have been remarkably reasonable in allowing you to activate 'new' installations (typically resulting from computer crashes or system or OS upgrades). I don't know that this has changed with Office 2013, since I have Office 365, which uses a different licensing model. I do not know exactly how their algorithm for deciding whether it is OK to allow a new Activation works, but I have only been directed to phone them a couple of times, and even then, a short exchange with an automated server has resulted in Activation being allowed.

FWIW, I believe that the system recognition algorithm combines CPU, BIOS, hard disk, and video card data, and has a threshold over which it decides that it is looking at a new computer. If you are below the threshold, Activation is automatically allowed. If you are above it, questions about when the last activation was and how many there have been over the lifetime of the license enter the picture.

Would such a migration (hdd to ssd) be recognized as an uninstall etc or would the bootup from the ssd partition be seamless without requiring a reinstall of Office 2013?

If you just clone your boot and program partition and can boot up the clone (which should work as long as neither the HD you are coming from nor the SSD require special drivers), everything, including Office, should just continue to work. When I do a major upgrade, I generally try to do everything at once and install a clean OS, so I have usually had to reinstall Office.