cant establish stable network connection

L

lex

i am trying to use a roaming user profile across 3 pc's
(1 server & 2 terminals) on my network but, as i am
obviously a pleb i'm stuck and cannot get the profile to
load on either terminals at system logon... all i get is
the msg_

"Windows did not load your roaming profile and is
attempting to log you on with your local profile. Changes
to the profile will not be copied to the server when you
logoff. Windows did not load your profile because a
server copy of the profile folder already exists that
does not have the correct security. Either the current
user or the Administrator's group must be the owner of
the folder. Contact your network administrator.(which
would be me)"

i cant understand a word this says otherwise i'd probably
gottit coz up 2 now its not been 2 bad. a translation
for a not-worthy like me would be a godsend... & if a fix
rolls off the top of any heads it'd be most appreciated
 
L

lex

okay i realise that my last msg was quite non-descript
but these cries for help aren't exactly my forte...
basically i have two accounts on the server box that i
would like to be able to access from the two remote
machines as they all get used quite often at the same
time and i keep having to either go upstairs to the
server box or start a remote session manually and
dissconnect the current server user. is there any way to
allow the client terminals to connect to the server (and
the two accuonts) automatically at desktop logon without
logging out the user of the server machine (which i keep
interrupting...)

this has been a long problem and i am eager to get it
fixed. any ideas?
 
B

brendan

You can only use one profile at a time unless you have
Windows 2000 Server or Windows 2003 server. Do you have
either of these? If not you can only remote desktop to
the server, which means booting off the person using that
PC.

Brendan
 
J

Jeffrey Randow (MVP)

On your server side, find your profile (actually, just use the
C:\DOCUMENTS AND SETTINGS\username directory). Right click on it and
select Properties. Click the Security Tab and then the Advanced Tab.
Click on the Ownership tab and take ownership of the profile (if you
are logged on as that user), making sure to apply this to all
subfolders and objects. Alternatively, you can just add the username
to the security entry to the folder (at the Security tab) and allow
that user full access (and then select the option to apply the
security to all subfolders, etc.)

Post back with the OS for your server, and I can give you a more
specific guideline on how to do this...

Jeffrey Randow (Windows MVP - Networking & Smart Display)
(e-mail address removed)

Please post all responses to the newsgroups for the benefit
of all USENET users. Messages sent via email may or may not
be answered depending on time availability....

Remote Networking Technology Wiki -
http://www.remotenetworktechnology.com
Smart Display Support - http://www.smartdisplays.us
Windows XP Expert Zone - http://www.microsoft.com/windowsxp/expertzone
 

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