NT Registry At Logon

Richard Hubbard rhubby at yahoo.com
Sat Oct 19 19:26:11 EDT 2002


Or vice versa, as was my case (but when I was first
doing DOS/Windows, it was UNIX rather than linux.. a
sign of my age, not my preferences!)

--- Scott Lawton <green_man at bluefrognet.net> wrote:
> On 17 Oct 2002 at 10:19, rwechter at liberatortime.com
> wrote:
> 
> > I think fully understanding the enemy's operating
> system(Microsoft)is
> > essential to the success of linux :)
> 
> HEAR, HEAR !!!!!
> Knowing the similarities and differences between
> Linux and Windows makes learning and embracing Linux
> a whole lot 
> easier. I know a DOS background helped me, and if I
> know how to do something in Windows I have a better
> chance of 
> figuring it out in Linux. 
> 
> > 
> > -----Original Message-----
> > From: owner-nflug at nflug.org
> [mailto:owner-nflug at nflug.org]On Behalf Of
> > Justin Bennett Sent: Thursday, October 17, 2002
> 10:13 AM To:
> > nflug at nflug.org Subject: NT Registry At Logon
> > 
> > 
> > I know this is not technically the place for this
> question but here
> > goes. I have NT/2K clients on a Solaris PCNetlink
> NT Domain (emulates
> > NT 4 SP4). I need to be able to add registry
> entries to a PC when it
> > boots or logs onto the domain. Without prompting
> the user, and the
> > users usually don't have rights to add registries.
> There are a lot of
> > people on here that know alot more about NT than
> I. I have a logon
> > script, and user/machine policies. I don't see
> anything in the
> > policies to let me do this. I have found reference
> to regedit /s
> > xxx.reg this works from an admin account but not a
> normal user
> > account.
> > 
> > Any help is apreciated
> > 
> > thanks
> > Justin
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > --
> > -------------------------------------------
> > Justin Bennett
> > Red Hat (Linux) Certified Engineer
> > Network Administrator
> > Dynabrade Inc.
> > 8989 Sheridan Dr
> > Clarence, NY 14031
> > 716-631-0100 ext 215
> > 
> > 
> > 
> 
> 
> -- 
> Scott
> Pegasus v 4.01
> 
> "There are 10 kinds of people in the world: 
> those who understand binary, and those who don't."
> Richard Hubbard 
> 


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