Nothing suspicious that I can see in group policy for that user/computer - a couple of scripts copy shortcuts to the desktop, but thats it. Already done one virus check on the relevant folders on the server; the PC had a fresh install yesterday...
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We had the same thing happening to our users try this.
Make the user an administrator and log them on - i bet the problem has gone away.
I also bet it wont happen on a FAT32 machine this is an NTFS permissions problem.
If I recall correctly on the local pc you need to give DOMAIN USERS full permissions to c:\windows\application data and c:\windows\temp
We have a winner! This user, when made an admin, didn't have the problem, as you said.. With the permissions set on the local machine as you suggested and admin status removed, the problem is still gone. Thanks for your help!
How odd, though - i can't see how this works, both as a problem and as a solution. The machine in question has been reinstalled, and both the user account and the profile have been recreated; no common element left. More to the point, my laptop is on NTFS, has Office 2003 installed, doesn't have the domain user permissions set and works fine. Odd...
Glad you sorted the problem. Question I have to ask though, is why are you using FAT32 on your machines?
Aha... Not my choice. I've recently joined the school and have inherited a network previously supported by ICT Solutions, Norfolk CC's IT support arm. They have particular... ways... of doing things. The reason I was given was that some school, somewhere in Norfolk, had had trouble between a peice of educational software and NTFS, so the standard practice now is to use FAT32. Of course this means no file and folder level permissions on local machines, so Winsuite (another great legacy) has to be set to hide all files on the C drive..
It must of been pretty old software! I'm not familiar with Winsuite, but I haven't heard great things about it. NTFS is easily more robust than FAT32, but I'm sure I don't need to tell you that :)Quote:
had had trouble between a peice of educational software and NTFS
I did login with local admin rights, as my user account is a domain admin account; and i certainly opened and closed the applications. This didn't stop the issue returning for the user affected, though, It was only changing the permissions on the folders that solved it, i'm afraid.