I found this old message, but no responses - really hoping someone has

  • Thread starter Thread starter dogrady
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dogrady

I found this old message, but no responses - really hoping someone has
figured out where to find this setting. The profile in question has
been deleted, but all other users of the PC get this when logging off -
where can I find the files or the setting so it stops trying to
synchronize files for a non-existent user?

Any tips would be great
Thanks

Dave
 
dogrady said:
I found this old message, but no responses - really hoping someone
has figured out where to find this setting. The profile in question
has been deleted, but all other users of the PC get this when
logging off - where can I find the files or the setting so it stops
trying to synchronize files for a non-existent user?

Any tips would be great

I would think the fastest and wisest solution (seeing this computer has had
users that no longer exist) would be to format and reinstall. Two to six
hours of constant effort vs the countless complaints/errors you may have
received by now....
 
Unfortunately, said computer is a floater, and if this comes up once,
it will likely appear again - and I'd rather not have to format each
time. If there really is no way to find the root cause I'll have to go
that route, but it would be a last resort.
 
I found this old message, but no responses - really hoping someone has
figured out where to find this setting. The profile in question has
been deleted, but all other users of the PC get this when logging off -
where can I find the files or the setting so it stops trying to
synchronize files for a non-existent user?

Any tips would be great
Thanks

Dave

the task does not show up synchronization settings > scheduled ?
 
That's a good question - where do I find that schedule? I think it's
set to activate everytime someone logs off, but if it's a schedule I
can remove that would be great.
 
Well it's like this. Bump has no meaning in a newsgroup. And so the dead
thread has now had the subject changed and nothing related to the
original subject remains. Start a new thread with the problem
appropriately defined.
 
Dave said:
Unfortunately, said computer is a floater, and if this comes up
once, it will likely appear again - and I'd rather not have to
format each time. If there really is no way to find the root cause
I'll have to go that route, but it would be a last resort.

Well - if you setup an unattended process (network, CD, etc) or even
formatted and imaged it using an imaging application - then you wouldn't
have that much to worry about and the system could be redone in 15 minutes
to 3 hours, dependent on how well you maintained the image and/or unattended
setup.
 
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