Terminate,
It's pretty easy to run programs in compatibility mode. Find the executable, right click, and go to properties. There should be a Compatibility tab. There should be a drop list of OSes. It's probably a good idea to make sure you are running the program as Administrator as well.
Hope...
For anyone who is looking, I found a work-around and posted it in the above thread. The problem, it seems, was Internet Explorer Enhanced Security Configuration... So secure, I had to turn it off.
-gmiles
After realizing how widespread this problem was (out of 13 machines, 10 had it), I did some comparisons in configurations between machines. It turns out the culprit is Internet Explorer Enhanced Security Configuration. I uninstalled it for Administrators on a couple of affected machines, and I...
I'm afraid that didn't do the trick. I'd already checked the first thing the mentioned, which doesn't seem to apply ti 2003 Server since none of the registry keys were there. Changing User Authentication was promising, but did not work unfortunately. Thanks for the link though.
-gmiles
Smah,
That tool doesn't seem to have anything related to allowing scripts to run on pages or permitting adding sites to the "Trusted Sites" zone.
I've tried adding sites manually with registry keys, and they will show up in the (grayed out, un-editable) Trusted Sites zone dialog, but it still...
Thanks for the help. Resetting IE didn't do the trick. I've opened a thread over at the 2003 forum about the issue:
http://www.tek-tips.com/viewthread.cfm?qid=1386179&page=1
Googling that I've done while I've experienced this problem indicates that similar problems happen on XP and Vista, but...
Hi all,
I've noticed this now with a couple of machines. When I open up Internet Options and go into Security, I get a little yellow bar at the bottom that warns me that "Some settings are managed by your system administrator." This prevents me from adding Trusted Sites, change site policies...
XP is not involved at all. It is just IE7 running on a virtual 2003 machine.
That being said, I've just noticed that I have the same problem on a physical 64-bit Windows 2003 Server Enterprise Edition machine. I was going to download some updates from Microsoft, and IE7 gives me the dread "Some...
The virtual server (Windows 2003 Enterprise Edition R2) is running inside another Windows 2003 EE R2 host. XP isn't involved at all. We're using Microsoft Virtual Server 2005R2.
At this point, I'd definitely rather be running VMware, since it seems to do virtualization a fair bit better, but...
Hi all,
We want to push the KB903234 patch to our users via our WSUS 2.0 server, which is running Server 2003. WSUS wasn't released via Windows Update, and so the WSUS server never saw it and pulled it in.
Is there a way to get the WSUS server to push this patch?
Thanks,
-gmiles
Linney,
Thanks for the help, but this machine is running 2003 Server EE. Nothing seems to be applied in Group Policy settings, and the machine is a brand new VM, so malware isn't really a possibility, since other clones have behaved fine. I can't really shut it down, since it's production...
I have the same problem on a Windows Server 2003 machine, and have seen it replicated elsewhere. In addition to being unable to change any settings, I can't add trusted sites, allow scripts to run (even at Windows Update), or change security levels. This is becoming very annoying for any number...
Still more potential meanings:
Did you mean encrypted?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Email_encryption
Sender verification?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-mail_authentication
Something else entirely?
-gmiles
Hi all,
I've been asked to set up a certain account to add a CC or BCC to every outgoing mail, for what I assume is archiving purposes. This needs to be done at the server level, since the user moves between Outlook, OWA, etc, and as such, some of the solutions like Auto BCC/CC that operate from...
Glad it helped someone else out.
I wouldn't create a folder for me just yet... I only code when I can't get someone else to do it... And even then, it isn't coding per se, it's just ve-e-ry cautious cutting and pasting... ;-)
Well, maybe a -little- coding.
This was my second script to do this task. The first one would indeed create an Active Directory contact, and forward mail to the contact, but it wasn't an /Exchange/ AD contact, so mail would bounce.
Word to the wise for people like me: AD contacts aren't quite the same as Exchange AD contacts...
I was eventually informed of OpenManage, the CD that does it all and avoids all sorts of hassle. I'm not sure why the Dell people I talked to didn't mention it.
Thanks, TheLad, I wish I'd heard that sooner.
-gmiles
Hi all,
We have a subset of users who we need to modify their account settings so as to forward their e-mail to another address for the time being. I know that this is done in Exchange by creating a new mail contact and then enabling mail forwarding. However, I don't really want to do this...
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