Changing a domain name, even in an all-Microsoft Windows server
environment, is strongly discouraged, at least on the user mailing
lists I am on. Better would be to use the domain migration tools, and
migrate to a newly named domain.
On Tue, Jul 2, 2013 at 11:07 AM, Ricky Nance wrote:
> Like Mich
On Thu, Mar 21, 2013 at 11:43 AM, Gregory Sloop wrote:
> ML> Well, it's a lot more work, but you could use the Windows utilities
> ML> FILEMON and REGMON to monitor what file and registry access your
> ML> applications require on the local machine, and then grant the local
> ML> user access to ju
On Thu, Mar 21, 2013 at 11:24 AM, Terry Austin wrote:
> On 21 Mar 2013 at 10:29, L.P.H. van Belle wrote:
>
>> DONT DO IT !!
>>
>> This is Administrators 1ste rule !!
>> NEVER, but then NEVER giver users Administrator/PowerUser rights.
>
> I have no choice. There's too much stuff out of my control
On Sun, Mar 17, 2013 at 5:10 PM, Thomas Simmons wrote:
> Ideally you should not use the same domain name for your AD domain.
> Microsoft used to use "domain.local" for a default configuration, but this
> can cause problems with certain external services (Exchange/Office365 for
> example) and it al
To see GPOs in effect, type GPRESULT.
On 5/14/10, o...@aloha.com wrote:
>> how are you supplying the server with the username from the failing client
>>
>> the username should be sambaservername\username so that the samba
>> server can authenticate against it's local sam.
>>
>> regards
>>
>> --
On Sat, May 8, 2010 at 4:00 AM, Christian PERRIER wrote:
> Quoting Mike Leone (tur...@mike-leone.com):
>
>> directories. Even tho Ubuntu 10.04 seems to have the /etc/pam.d files
>> already configured for samba, I copied over the common-account,
>> common-auth, common-password, common-session files
No, dim-win2300 knows who turgon is. ;-) in fact, I am logged in on
the console of dim-win2300 right now. And turgon is a Domain Admin. It
was the account I used to join the laptop to the domain with. And it
did join, as I see the laptop machine account in AD. So I think it
must be something else .