MichaelF was on the right track. Check out this link. It's kind of old, but I think it will help you accomplish what you need to do through gpo.
Without being familiar with your printer I would not be able to advise you on that. Perhaps check the settings of the print driver on the...
Since you have not granted the user the Manage Printers permission, the change that is being made is only for print jobs being submitted by that...
Creating shares on the root does not mean root itself is shared. When browsing the network, users would only see the shares. (You could actually...
Maybe take a look here.
A user has the right to modify settings for their own print jobs using the print driver on the local machine. The job is then sent to the print...
You are correct in that you can see all of the shares but cannot access them unless you have permission. There is a root administrative share (c$...
Rt click the taskbar and choose properties. Click Keep the taskbar on top of other windows. No reply necessary.
It sounds like you might have changed Performance Options for the system. If you open System from the Control Panel and choose the Advanced tab...
Try this How to re-create the Show desktop icon on the Quick Launch toolbar in Windows XP.
You create the share so that you can access it/map it in. You can add perms to the share so only certain groups/users can access it. Once access...
Group policy will go a long way in helping you control what your end users can do. You can also redirect their documents to secure folders on the...
I would check that the XP "box" uses the DC as it's dns server.
Why don't you demote and promote the dc again thus recreating the domain and associated dns info. i would skip wins setup. it really isn't needed.
You want to make sure your DC has all five FSMO roles (google> fsmo). If it doesn't, you can force it to seize these roles. You may want to unjoin...
It is probably because of product activation. After installation windows will poll your hardware and create a unique id that is tied to your copy...
I believe this is the key: HKLM\SOFTWARE\Clients\Mail\ "Mail_Client_Name "\shell\open\command Value: "C:\Mail_Client_Path\MAIL_CLIENT.EXE "
If you look at the top of the tree it shows you are accessing the local computer policy. There is no option for redirection in the local policy....
Could this possibly be a permission policy on the target machine. Possibly the user rights are causing this poilcy to not be properly applied....
From my previous post I wanted to add, can you print the full report to the printer on the remote host. Do you have the same print driver and...
Separate names with a comma.