Need to protect my activation in case computer is pulled

I’m on a job using my own copy of After Effects (CS3) but it’s not my computer.  There’s a chance that the vendor supplying the computer may be changed suddenly, and the old computer pulled overnight.  I want to avoid having my activated copy of AE disappear along with the computer.  Is there a way to protect against this?  Ideally I could keep my activation on a USB thumb drive and plug it in when I sit down to work, but Adobe tells me that's not possible.  Any suggestions, short of deactivating every night before I go home?  I know I have two activations left if I lose this one, but I'd hate to lose one this way, and don't want the computer owner to be running around with the third one.

If the serial is registered to you, you can let it blacklist at any point and get a new one, you may just have to pay a service fee and naturally, outside the cuirrent cycle Adobe may want to sell you an upgrade. Activating and deactivating it every day seems slightly extreme, even if there is no longer a limit on deactivations, to correct Andrew's info. Still, I concur with Rick. Fiddling too much with this activation stuff could indeed cause problems at some point, especialyl if your internet connection at work is not available...
Mylenium

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    Hi,
    Recently purchased a Lenevo X301 laptop and installed with Windows XP. Unfortunately while changing the BIOS setiings, i have selected permanently disable option for computrance anti theft agent under Security settings.
    Now I have settings are as follows..
    Full Theft Protection module Activation
    Current setting - Permanently disabled
    Remote Diaable module activation
    Current settin - Permanently disabled
    I tried to change it enabled state in several ways, but i am not successful, Could you please help me how to activate computrance agent.
    Also one more question, do i need to purchase the Computrace LoJack to activate Anri Theft agent in my laptop.
    Your quick response is highly appreciated.

    Regarding your keyboard problem, it seems to be a very low-level problem. The driver cannot access the Control Registers on the Keyboard. By going down from your error message to the lowest level, one can see that it's probably a simple "outb" operation (write data on a specified address, shouldn't fail if the address is correct...) that doesn't succeed.
    So I think you defintely need to look in your BIOS if you didn't deactivate something when upgrading, or messed with some address space, or many things I cannot think of right now.
    Good luck

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