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Hi, I am running into the same situation using Windows 7 Ent. I've used BitLocker to encrypt a USB device 10 times as part of testing. The Recover Key Identification has changed 3 out of the 10 times. I AM storing the recovery key text file on the desktop each time, deletign the old text file in between tests.
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Dear around 3 years back I encrypted one of my laptop drive and couldn't remember the password or find the recovery ...
I am not sure how to pass the Key using Invoke-WebRequest cmdlet. Also this has to run from all the Windows servers in the domain so I don't want to import the certificate to all the servers (thousands of them). Any pointer on this on how to pass the certificate with the key in Invoke-WebRequest cmdlet? Thanks,
2) The key that's returned from a mass-market laptop may not be the same as on the COA (certificate of authenticity), and probably can't be used to activate a new installation of Windows. You may be able to buy recovery disks from Dell. The recovery disks should be less expensive than a new OS license. You have just discovered that all of the ...
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If we know the source data has intetgrity, there would be no integrity issue by not having a primary key duplicated in a staging table unless it helps with performance when moving from staging to Data Mart. If the source is a combination of data tables and we need integrity before the Data Mart, we add primary Keys to staging area.
It should pull in your list of computer names, loop through them retrieving the key value, then add an object representing the computer name and serial number to an array. You should be able to pipe the resulting array of objects directly into other cmdlets like Out-File or Export-Csv.