Yes! That worked. I've had command line stuff beaten out of me in Windows long enough that I forgot to try that. Thanks! --STeve Andre' On 10/08/15 13:32, Jason Waterbury wrote: > I haven't been using the Wizard for awhile now so I haven't ran into this > issue much. I scripted it a while back now to do all versions of SPSS and > AMOS but the basic idea is to use an elevated command prompt, navigate to > folder where the program licenseactivator.exe is, and run it with the > activation code. > > cd "C:\Program Files\IBM\SPSS\Statistics\23" > licenseactivator.exe c43...33e > > > > On Thu, 8 Oct 2015 13:13:35 -0400, STeve Andre' <[log in to unmask]> wrote: > >> OK, I've never installed SPSS on 8, just 7 and before. I tried changing >> the screen >> res but that didn't help--the dialog box was as small as before.. >> >> --STeve >> >> On 10/08/15 13:09, Gary Schrock wrote: >>> Not sure whether this is an issue with win 10, or whether the computer >>> you're working on has a high dpi screen. I've had trouble with the >>> high dpi screens, and have found I had to put the screen in a more >>> normal resolution temporarily to install and register spss. Once >>> installed it seems on at higher resolution. (I've run into this issue >>> on win 8 machines before). >>> >>> On Oct 8, 2015 12:57 PM, "STeve Andre'" <[log in to unmask] >>> <mailto:[log in to unmask]>> wrote: >>> >>> I can't imagine I'm the first to see this-- >>> >>> When I get to authorizing SPSS on win10, the dialog boxes are >>> far too small to be useful. In particular, the input box for the >>> auth code itself is invisible. If I click around the area where I >>> know >>> it should be it sort of appears, but so far I haven't been able >>> actually enter text. >>> >>> SPSS itself is OK screen wise but barfs at the lack of a license or >>> 30 day trial. >>> >>> Since SPSS uses Java I start to wonder if that is where the problem >>> lies? >>> >>> Thanks for any ideas... >>> >>> --STeve Andre' >>> >>