I have installed many drivers in the past on an XP machine and never had this
issue. When I performed a "fresh" install of Vista, it installed some default
drivers for ethernet, memory bus, and drive busses. I then updated my
graphics driver, sound driver, and mouse driver without any issue.
The nForce4 driver installs a new ethernet driver, memory driver, and sata
raid driver (maybe a new IDE bus driver as well). I am guessing that the
default that Vista installed was a Dell driver for those components. When I
installed the new drivers, they looked like new components instead of updated
Dell components.
I will tell you that this is very frustrating. All I can say is "Goodbye
Vista!"
"Ed Stoddard" wrote:
> Well, I believe the nForce4 driver deals with the motherboard, right? Vista
> probably thought it was a new computer. 
>
> "dev" wrote:
>
> > /Chris/ said:
> > > I have been running Vista Ultimate x32 just fine for a while, and then I
> > > noticed that nVidia posted new drivers for nForce4. I decided to install the
> > > new drivers and then I had to re-activate Vista!!! How many times can I
> > > reactivate Vista, and why should I have to reactivate when installing
> > > drivers? If I install a new version of the drivers (or rollback) will I have
> > > to reactivate again?
> >
> > Perhaps the driver install was not the true reason. I have installed
> > dozens of drivers over the years, and have never encountered a
> > reactivation as a result.
> >