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Hi,
I am working on a new CRM v3.0 installation and I noticed that I can't login on the installation. It has something to do with the novell login. But I can't figure out why.
When logging in on novell I also logon to a windows domain for exchange.
This part works, since I can open outlook 2003 and it will access exchange right away.
But accessing CRM doesn't work, it seems like it doesn't recognize my username and password. This while exchange is accessable.
Am I save to say that both apps should work in terms of login, since outlook works allright.
There's one special condition on the CRM Server: we are running biztalk with single-signon too on this server. (It's a test environment).
Could this cause problems with the logon?
WM.
What about weapons of mass-construction?
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On Linux I can use 'uptime' to see how long the computer has been running since its last boot.
How can I do this on Windows, and in particularly on Windows Server 2003?
Help appreciated!
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
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There is a Microsoft uptime.exe. I believe it's part of the Res Kit.
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Cool, thank you. I don't think its part of the resource kit though, I downloaded that and there was no sign, you can however get it direct from downloads at MS.
Regards,
Rob Philpott.
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PsInfo[^] shows this information along with many other statistics.
Stability. What an interesting concept. -- Chris Maunder
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i am not able to start my com+ application service when ever i start the service it gives message unexpected error and terminate, due to this my IIS is also not working.
Pls suggest possible solutions
thanx
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Check the event logs for any errors. Without knowing what the errors are, you're pretty much on your own for troubleshooting. There's only about a thousand possible problems...
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Hi, I have create the answer file for automate installation of windows xp. The target client is a single new machine which consite of 40GB unpartition hard disk drive. I want to customize my answer file to automatically devide disk space to 10GB format with NTFS for installation an operating system and the remain 30GB drive format as NFTS automatically to store document?
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Once again, the Windows XP Resource Kit. Unattended Installs...
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Thank you . I already have it.
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Hi, I want to perform disk duplication to automate windows xp installation. Does any one know any resource that I could update my knowledge?
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This stuff is pretty standard, you can find more at Wikipedia[^]. It's called "Cloning". Norton Ghost, Drive Clone, DriveImage, TrueImage, ...
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Thank you very much for your comment. I also implement a mini setup for disk duplication but what is an obstacle for me is doing an image of the hard disk. For example, norton ghost could be able to ghost a hard disk and restore an image to the other computer. And now what I need is a step by step guide to ghost/image a hard disk from a source computer to destination computer.
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Roath Kanel wrote: And now what I need is a step by step guide to ghost/image a hard disk from a source computer to destination computer.
There is no "step-by-step" guide. You have to put your own pieces together depending on your own environment.
Ghost, or any other image software, is fully capable of writing a hard drive image to a file somewhere, be it on a set of CD's, a DVD, an external hard drive, or a network drive. What you do depends entirely on your deployment requirements and storage medium.
If you want to slam just one or two machines at a time, then creating a boot CD with the image software on it and keeping the drive image file on a set of CD's or DVD's is perfrectly fine.
If you have to deploy to hundreds of machines, then a network solution would work better.
I myself, use PowerQuest's (now part of Symantec) ImageCenter. It comes with a Server component you can setup on a machine to store and serve up nothing but disk images. You still need to create your own boot floppy or CD to get the target machines up and running so you can image them. You still need to build network support into those floppies/CD's by including DOS-based drivers for your network card(s) or CD drivers to get the read from a CD. But this depends on what image software you're using. You might even have to include support for loading different sets of drivers if you want those boot CD's to work on different network cards and/or reading from CD's...
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Thank you very much for your detail explaination. So now I decide to find a documentation about the specific product on how to made an image of the hard disk drive. If I found any problem I will post the question to this forum again.
Best regard,
Kanel
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Thank you very much for your article. But what is an objstacle for me is the step by step guide on how to image a hard disk and restore it on the other machine as I mention in the previous post[^].
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Hi, I want to practic USMT for windows xp from windows 2003. Does any one know the resource that I could read to perform this practic?
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Windows XP Resource Kit...
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Thank
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Hi, on NTFS file system, administrator would be able to set the permission for the specific user or group. The permission is set in Access Control List (ACL) and store in Access Control Entry (ACE). What I want to know is: Where does Access Control Entry is stored? Is it a file or not?
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No, it's not a file. It's parts of the files directory entry in the filesystem.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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Dave Kreskowiak wrote: It's parts of the files directory entry in the filesystem
So, what is file directory entry? I want to know its store location.
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Roath Kanel wrote: So, what is file directory entry?
You don't know anything about how file systems work, do you? Seriously, I'm not bashing you, I'm asking...
If not, this[^] is a great place to find out.
Roath Kanel wrote: I want to know its store location.
It's in the system area of the partition, not in a "file" per se.
Dave Kreskowiak
Microsoft MVP - Visual Basic
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