That was done right off the bat. Theres no way your going to extract a PST off of a cd strictly because of the read only attribute. You will recieve a "you do not have permission" or "access denied" error of some sort. That did not solve the problem.
The file is in use by something, it doesnt matter what. By switching into safe mode you will not have to worry about this. It may even show in your msconfig that something is utilizing it. it very well couuld be a virus. In the mean time, safe boot and delete it.
I would check out the Users section under Control Panel and if it does not list a local administrator account in there, add one on, set the password as you see fit then give it another shot. Does it act like theres one not there at all or is it acting like its the incorrect password.
Right click "My Network Places" on your desktop. Choose properties.
Right click "Local area connection" and choose properties. In that list scroll down to "Internet Protocol TCP/IP" and select that then choose properties. From there you can change your IP address as necessary.
It is an unmanaged switch so I will swap ports and see if that effects it at all. I can remake a cable or swap it with another server no problem. I will switch ports right now and try to pull a mass of data.
None of the other servers seem to have this issue so I wouldn't think the switch is at fault but who knows. I can certainly switch ports no problem to find out.
Whenever I put a decent load of data to be pulled across the network FROM a particular 2000 server it will just lose its network connection completely and I have to reboot it in order to get it functioning again.
Does anyone have any idea what would cause this? The only thing I can think of...
Make sure that you are logging into your home workgroup or whatever setup you have and you have to realize that if you WERE logging into a domain as say "administrator" and whatever password that now you are logging into the LOCAL machine for administrator and you need to use the LOCAL password...
I believe I know the problem.
Whenever you initially get a new machine you login as administrator for the domain and then add your other user. Well what you did was logged in as that user and then added him to the domain.
If you would've initially done it with the administrator acccount you...
I've had a similar problem when I configured a VPN at home. You need to shut down the VPN setup. I believe it was something like start>run>secpol.msi and in there you should have your VPN setup with a green light on it, you need to right click and disable it and then you can access the router...
I've only used the PIX firewall and I personally don't like it because of the programming side of it tends to be fairly tedious. I think a firewall should be gui based and simple to setup and define your access amongst users/vpn etc etc... To me it just doesn't do that for me.
Okay guys I appear to of found a solution for this and wanted to add the solution to this thread for future people that search.
Go to file>run> SVDATA
From here you can follow the instructions brought up on transferring over files as necessary.
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