System Manager
Upon reboot it takes me 4-6 tries to mount my mailbox store. The
mailbox store is about 11 GB so I know it can't be a size limit
problem. Does anyone know why? The event logs just tell me that the
size is limited to 16GB. Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178952
HELP!!
I had to reboot my server since it was completely unresponsive. I went
through the event logs and found the following:
1:17:29 AM device \Device\Scsi\mraid2k1 Did not respond within the
specified time out period
1:17:39 AM system shutdown was unexpected
7:34:11 AM driver detected a controller error on \Device\Harddisk1\DR4
Any help?? Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178951
CALs floppy
I need to add 5 CALs to a SBS2000 server with 25 CALs installed. I know
I have to buy SBS2003 CALs and downgrade them. But the question is:
where I can buy/find the floppy diskette?
Microsoft Italy says me to ask to my reseller (Esprinet) but it seems
to be exausted!
Is there any other way to install some CALs (bought off course) ?
Thanks Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178948
MI5 Persecution: Dirk Gently on the Toronto Case
Dirk was on the West Coast when he got the call. An old
friend at the Toronto police department thought he would like
to fly up and take a look at a homicide which had occurred
the previous evening. He decided to skip the last day at the
World Holistics conference and take the next plane out of
San Francisco.
The flight was bad; Dirk had been hit on the back of the head
by the Newspaper trolley, the drinks trolley, the dinner trolley
and now the gift trolley. When the hostesses weren?t trying to
tear his arm off they pestered him to stop leaning into the aisle
- ignoring the fact that the guy next to him was taking up one and
a half seats. Air Canada used to be the flight which was so
good you just didn?t wanna get off - on this occasion Dirk
would be glad to see the back of the plane and the over sized
alternative comedian wedged into the window seat.
After breathing in a couple of lungfulls of crisp Canadian air
Dirk took a taxi into town. There was a small group of
demonstrators outside the MacDonalds and the taxi driver
insisted on stopping on the opposite side of the street. ?Don?t
Eat Meat? the placards read and the demonstrators chanted. A
couple of policemen where stopping the crowd entering the
restaurant itself - one held up his arm and challenged Dirk. A
wave of the fax he had been sent and the policeman pushed
open the door.
There were few customers in the restaurant. Not surprising
really with a demonstration going on outside, half the dining
area roped off with tape and a dead body seated at one of the
tables. ?Mr Gently sir? the officer in charge called out as he
peeled one end of the tape off a column ?We were told not to
touch anything til? you got here?.
The body of the man slumped awkwardly in a chair. Then
even a dead body would start getting uncomfortable in a
MacDonalds chair after twenty minutes - and this one had
been there for at least eighteen hours. Two back legs and the
tail of a cat hung out of the man?s gaping mouth. Dirk turned
to the officer, ?I suppose you are going to tell me this is the
darndest thing you ever saw??
?Ain?t this the darnd...?. The officer seemed annoyed that Dirk
had second guessed him. ?We?re removing the body in a few
minutes, so if you can get through as quick as possible?
?Many people eat cats in fast food restaurants?? Dirk asked
and without waiting for an answer leant over the table to pick
up an untouched burger. ?And what?s this?? he asked waving
it in front of the officers face.
?It?s a Vedgie Burger? The waitress, who was cleaning one of
the adjacent tables, shouted across. She walked over to Dirk.
?We started doing them because of that lot out there? she
nodded towards the protesters who were pressing there faces
against the windows ?They?re called Linda McCartney Vedgie
burgers - ever heard of them??
Dirk suddenly felt faint, perhaps a combination of hunger and
jet lag. ?This is deja vu all over again? he thought to himself.
He glanced at policemen - at the badge on his shoulder ?OPD?
but this wasn?t Ontario this was Toronto. OPD - Officially
Pronounced Dead. It dawned on Dirk what was happening, he
knew what he would see if he looked out of the window. Sure
enough, there it was, the Volkswagen Beetle parked across
the road - number plate 28IF - 28 IF Paul McCartney had
lived. And amongst the lyrics of the song blaring out into the
restaurant he could pick out the words ?I buried Paul?. Now it
was though Dirk was viewing the whole scene though a TV
screen. This was conspiracy. Not -a- conspiracy, or -the-
conspiracy, but just plain conspiracy.
?You look faint - are you OK mister? The waitress asked.
Dirk shook his head ?Probably a bit hungry? Then to
economise on dialogue took out a pack of cigarettes and held
it out towards the girl. She was about to take one but Dirk
snatched the pack away, held it up to his mouth and drew out
two cigarettes. He lit both then passed one of them to the girl.
It was the closest he had come to a sexual encounter in three
months.
?Want a Burger?? the waitress asked.
Dirk looked down at the Vedgie Burger on the table. ?No
thanks - just a plate of fries?
The waitress walked away and Dirk looked around the room.
Apart from a family seated in the far corner there was only
one other person in the restaurant - and he wasn?t eating. The
guy was about mid twenties and had straggling, shoulder
length hair. On the table in front of him were lots of pieces of
paper cut into squares. Every so often he would pick up a
camcorder and pan it around the room and then, when he was
finished, speak into a microphone which was attached to a
tape recorder. Dirk walked over to where the man was sitting.
The small pieces of paper had paragraphs of text written on
them and were stuck to the top of table with blobs of mustard.
Lines had been drawn, some solid some dotted, on the table
top with a marker pen. The lines ran from one piece of paper
to another.
?What are the lines for?? Dirk asked, realising straight away
that ?What the hell are you doing?? would be more
appropriate.
?You see? The man replied nervously ?The dotted lines are
weak links and the solid lines are strong links. The dotted
lines are things which are happening in the rest of the world
and the solid lines are things which are happening to me. Now
you see I draw over a dotted line, replacing it with a solid line,
when I can link something back to me. Like this? The pen
squeaked over the Formica and before Dirk could interrupt
the man added. ?You see I lost my short term memory and, as
a consequence have a very short attention span. I write down,
record and film everything then put it all together later?
?So? Dirk interrupted. ?You filmed what happened here??
?Yes, yes, it?s here on this tape? The man pushed the cassette
across the table. On the label the words ?Grassy Knoll? had
been crossed through and replaced with ?MacDonalds?.
Suddenly the man sprung from his seat. Dirk turned and saw
that the body was being removed on a stretcher. As it passed
the man picked a small object off the edge of the stretcher
itself. ?This is important? he said, laying a blood stained bullet
on one of the small pieces of paper on the table.
Suddenly the room was filled with a deafening throbbing
sound as a Black Helicopter landed in the street outside. Two
men in United Nations uniforms got out and collected the
stretcher. Back at the table the long haired man was replacing
all the dotted lines with solid ones. Dirk panicked and began
to walk backwards at some speed. Barging through the swing
doors he stumbled into the kitchen, tripped and felt himself
sink slowly into a large vat.
?The guys fallen into the batter? Dick heard someone shout
before he sunk below the surface. He came to sitting in a chair
with the batter solidifying all over his body. He surveyed the
room through two eye-holes someone had cut. Suddenly the
chair on which he was sitting was picked up carried through
the restaurant and out of the building. As the chair was being
lifted and put into the back of a van, Dirk caught a glimpse of
the waitress following him. ?Your fries mister, your
plate o...?.
The doors of the van shut and Dirk tried desperately to steady
himself as it sped across town. Eventually the doors flew open
and Dirk was flung into the road at which point the solidified
batter shattered and set him free. Standing up he found
himself outside the international departures terminal of
Toronto airport.
In the departure lounge Dirk had time to reflect on the day?s
events. He had got caught up in the conspiracy theories and
the haphazard welding together of pieces of irrelevant
information. It was time to catch the person who was
operating the bizarre cognitive engine which appeared in
front of him like a fairground mirror, distorting any flaw it
could find in his own, fragile, map of the real world.
Dirk leant into the aisle of the plane as it took off for London.
The oversized person next to him swung his arms violently as
he complained about every thing from the supper in a plastic
tray to the state of British politics. With a shaven head and a
badly fitting suit the man looked as though he could have
worked behind the reception desk of the Kremlin. However
when he spoke he did so in a Liverpudlian accent. ?Me I
blame the Con-serv-a-tive government, me. The Tour-rees.
That-cher. Me. They need a good kicking? He jerked his feet
forward and struck the seat in front with his Doc Martins.
?With these. Me Doc Martins. Doctor Martin?s, Doctor
Martin?s, Doctor Martin?s Booots!? The phrase was now
being sung over and over again as the man writhed in his seat
and clicked his fingers.
Dirk looked down at the boots and thought of the reaction
most people used to deal with the paranoids at the end of the
wire. A nice quick kick. ?Oi nutter - get some therapy?. This is
the easy way out and perhaps the safest. After all there you
are sat, alone, in front of the screen. No body language
between you some paranoid. No way of telling if he really is
some gibbering psycho. Look at it too long and you be drawn
in. Fall into the tangled database of weird links with him. Who
knows he may be watching you, reassembling and linking your
experiences with his. How sure are you of you own cognitive
threads. After all cognition is only a bug fix for a neurological
system which was designed in a hurry - it?s abused by
everyone from politicians to advertisers. If people really can
convince each other that a bottle of washing up liquid is as
exciting as an orgasm using just television God knows what
they can do with a computer. Better to avoid the risk. A swift
kick. After all if you?re Homophobic you put the boot in
because you are scared of any ambiguity in your own sexuality
- why not be Nutterphobic as well.
Although Dirk would have liked to devoted time to tracking
the culprit down he decided to let it rest. The Internet
changed over the next twenty odd years. A lot of the people
who used it went out and got lives. And those who already
had lives burnt them away. The number of users had dwindled
after someone had invented a C++ program, with truth as a
variable, to deal handle politics and government. Dirk had
already retired from finding old ladies cats with the help of
obscure science when he got another call from Toronto.
It was 4th March 2025 when he booked onto the Air Canada
flight from Heathrow. The silver haired woman in the seat
next to him painted bright red lipstick around her mouth. ?Of
course it was no surprise to be offered the job after Claire
Raynor retired? she sneered? After all I used to be a
psychiatric nurse... Now if Blokes had periods they would
understand...?
By chance the taxi ride to Toronto mental hospital took him
past the MacDonalds - where the whole thing had started. Of
course it was barely recognisable having become a Church Of
Scientology Vedgie Bar. Police in riot gear kept the two sets
of demonstrators apart. Dirk didn?t really know what to
expect when he got to the hospital. The girl at the reception
desk directed him to a row of chairs in a wide well lit
corridor. There was a strong smell of disinfectant, the
furniture and the carpets were immaculately clean and behind
the rows of teak veneer doors the ?nutters? were all safely
locked away. For some reason Dirk started thinking about
CompuServe forums.
A tall blond woman in a white coat approached. ?Mr Gentle, I
assume?
?Yes? Dirk replied shaking her by the hand. ?You?re the nurse
who...?
?Doctor? She interrupted, ?Doctor Killfile? She led Dirk across
the corridor towards one of the doors then stopped with her
hand resting on the handle. ?Now you know about this person
don?t you?? and after Dirk nodded she continued ?Don?t tell
him anything about yourself - don?t let him get into you head.
If he does he?ll screw it up?
The door opened to reveal a frail man sitting in from of a TV
screen. He had a keyboard on his lap and next to the television
was a computer screen. Dirk glanced at the walls of the room
and remembered that his settee at home need upholstering.
The nurse left the room and the man looked up ?So you come
to my daughters wedding and ask me to kill a man? he said in
a dry cackling voice. ?Look? he continued, pointing at the
screen, ?I know that man. They?re talking about me now -
listen?. The man stared at Dirk. ?What?s your name? Are you
one of my friends from the Internet? - Are the lambs still
screaming Dirk??
Dirk, at first recoiled in horror, then felt a sense of anti
climax. So this is what they hyped up to superstar status on
the back of their own fears of madness. Dirk was reminded of
the film ?A day on The Beach? where a submarine had set off
to search a post nuclear World to track down a signal coming
from a remote military base - only to find it was being sent by
a Coke bottle half balanced on a Morse tapper. Outside the
room the nurse waited for him. Because his nicotine craving
had returned - and to avoid an awkward piece of dialogue -
Dirk turned to her and asked . ?Patch??
Dirk took two nicotine patches from his wallet the first of
which he stuck onto the inside of his arm. Stepping closer to
Doctor Killfile he opened her white coat and slid his hand
into the opening at the front of her dress. He pressed the
patch onto her leg as close to the top of her inner thigh as
he dare. She took a deep breath and then slowly breathed out.
?What Bogart could have done with these things? Dirk
thought to himself.
?Is he crazy?? Dirk asked tilting his head back to towards the
door.
?Who knows? Doctor Killfile replied ?We let him type away.
He sees something on the TV in the morning and it keeps him
busy all day. What he types doesn?t go anywhere it just stays
on a mainframe in the basement. It can be read by anyone else
in the building but that?s it. We got them all in here conspiracy
theorists, racists, nationalists. They?ve created a world within
a world really...? Her voice trailed away and she stared down
the corridor for a while then added ?So long are two things
are different neither will come to be in the other and so
become at once both one and two.?
Dirk gave her a puzzled look ?You mean their brains are
fried??
?Fried?? Killfile smiled at Dirk ?No that was Plato?. Then the
smile fell from her face. ?You must remember, mister, plate
o...?
695 Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178947
MI5 Persecution: Security Service Tribunal Denies
Security Service Tribunal Denies
In June 1997 the Security Service Tribunal wrote to me regarding the complaint I had brought against MI5 in February. They say,
The Security Service Tribunal have now investigated your complaint and
have asked me to inform you that no determination in your favour has
been made on your complaint.
Again, I do not believe their denials. I think MI5 *has* taken the action against me as described, and is refusing
to admit what they have done. To the best of my knowledge, the Security Service Tribunal has *never* found in favour
of a complainant. This tends to strongly suggest that MI5 lies on a routine basis, and the Tribunal can't fulfil its
functions in the face of Security Service falsehoods.
695 Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178946
MI5 Persecution: Communications with Security Service Tribunal in 1999
Communications with Security Service Tribunal in 1999
I took some more potshots at the SS-Tribunal in the first half of 1999. The correspondence between myself and the Tribunal
Secretary is detailed on this webpage. Ultimately I decided not to pursue another complaint with them, partly from Robin
Ramsay's advice (and that of a solicitor I consulted), but mostly because it was rather obvious from Mr Brooks' replies
that the Tribunal has no investigative means of its own and is that useless animal, a toothless watchdog.
Included with this first letter was a copy of the leaflet, "Complaints about the Security Service". This tells you that
the Tribunal can order "the service to end its inquiries about you; the service to destroy any records it holds about
those inquiries; the quashing of a property warrant; financial compensation". Yeah, right. Look, there's a flying pig, oink-flap, oink-flap.
My subsequent letter to Nick Brooks, Tribunal Secretary, dated 25 March 1999, said;
Dear Mr Brooks,
We spoke on the phone last week and you kindly sent a copy of the form,
"Complaints about the Security Service".
I have a few questions which I should like to ask you, before I undertake the task of
making a formal complaint. As you know I made a complaint in February 1997, and in June
of that year the tribunal made a bland and unsatisfactory statement that "no determination in
your favour has been made on your complaint". During our phone conversation I expressed
the view that the Tribunal was incapable of performing its functions and acts as a
whitewashing body for the Security Service. My questions are as follows;
(1) Has the Security Service Tribunal ever during its existence found in favour of a
compaint against MI5?
(2) Is the Tribunal able to disclose whether "no determination in your favour" is made
because MI5 claims to have no inquiries on a subject, or whether it is made because MI5
admits to actions against a subject but claims justification?
If disclosure is not possible for individual cases, then in 1997 for how many cases
(out of what total) did MI5 claim justification?
(3) Is the Tribunal able to investigate information such as British Airways passenger lists,
given that these could conclusively prove MI5 involvement? Would the Tribunal be forced to
rely on MI5 to carry out such investigations, or would it have some other means of
investigating? It might look slightly ridiculous for the Tribunal to rely on MI5 to investigate
their own misdeeds.
When I made my previous complaint to the Tribunal in 1997 I gave very little
information as to the nature of my complaint. This time I intend to give as complete
information as possible; but before I do so, I would ask you to answer the questions above, to
outline the "ground rules" for a Tribunal investigation and reporting of its results.
Yours sincerely,
Mr Brooks replied by sending me a photocopy of two pages from the 1997 Report of the Security Service Commissioner, as follows.
The photocopied pages from the 1997 Report follow.
In particular, the answers the report gives to my questions are; the Security Service Tribunal has NEVER found in favour
of a complainant; see sections 29 and 31 of the scanned report. Nick Brooks has confirmed orally over the phone that he
has no memory of the Tribunal ever finding in favour of a complainant.
Secondly, the question of whether the Tribunal is able to disclose "no determination in your favour" is because MI5 claims
to have no inquiries on a subject, or whether it's because MI5 admits to having inquiries but claims they are justified. The
answer to this one is in section 24, which says the ambiguity is intentional; and the Tribunal will in no circumstances give
an unambiguous answer of whether MI5 claims or disclaims inquiries on a subject.
In section 27 of the report, SS Commissioner Lord Justice Stuart-Smith says the blanket denials "might lead some to speculate
that members of the service are carrying out operations involving unlawful interference with property, such as the installation
of eavesdropping equipment, without first obtaining a warrant from the Home Secretary." He goes on to try to deny this speculation.
But we've heard from Peter Wright that this went on all the time in the 1960s. So why wouldn't it still be happening now? Of course it is.
The Tribunal Secretary had avoided answering the question from my previous letter, of whether the Tribunal had any independent
investigative capacity. So I asked him again.
Dear Mr Brooks,
Thank you for your letter dated 6 April enclosing an extract of the 1997 Report of the
Security Service Commissioner. This answers two of the three questions asked in my letter
of 25 March.
The third question remains. In 1993 I travelled on a British Airways flight on which
there also travelled four men, one of whom stared at me, laughed and said, "if he tries to run
away we'll find him". I took this to mean that these were the men who had been pursuing me
for some time in the UK. This leads me to ask again the last question in my previous letter;
(3) Is the Tribunal able to investigate information such as British Airways passenger lists,
given that these could conclusively prove MI5 involvement? Would the Tribunal be forced to
rely on MI5 to carry out such investigations, or would it have some other means of
investigating? It might look slightly ridiculous for the Tribunal to rely on MI5 to investigate their
own misdeeds.
I would very much hope that some means is available to the Tribunal and
Commissioner to investigate possible MI5 malefaction, other than relying on MI5 themselves.
When I receive an answer to this question from you, I will work to put together a more
comprehensive and detailed complaint for the Tribunal's consideration.
Yours sincerely,
Brooks' reply was;
Brooks doesn't want to give a direct reply to the question, since that would place him in a bad light. So he gives an indirect
answer; the tribunal, he avoids saying, has no investigative capacity; there is no mention even of any investigative capacity
provided by MI5 themselves; nobody can investigate anything, all the Tribunal can do is ask MI5, and they, in their "Alice in
Wonderland" world, can redefine the truth as it pleases them, and dissemble, and lie.
Before deciding not to put another formal complaint before the Tribunal, I asked Robin Ramsay, editor of Lobster magazine, what
he thought of the idea of making a complaint to the Tribunal. He replied;
RESPONSE Yes it is a waste of time. They will do nothing.
In a further email he elaborated;
As for quoting me on the Security Service Tribunal - if you think my
comments would mean anything, feel free. The problem people have is
this: they almost have to go through the motions of going to the
Tribunal for if they don't they will always be asked, 'Why didn't you
go the proper authorities?' (This is one of the chief functions of
'the proper authorities'.)
Robin Ramsay
So the sum of the various parts of this story is; DON'T GO TO THE TRIBUNAL. If you do, then MI5 will open a file on you (if you
don't have one already). Don't do as I did, do as I say. If you feel a really deep-seated urge to complain, do so first under an
invented name, which will make you understand just how useless the Tribunal is, how little information they provide, and how
unpleasant it is to know that you have given MI5 a reason to officially open a file on you in their Registry.
695 Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178942
MI5 Persecution: Eye Say, and Lord Gnome Answers
Eye Say, and Lord Gnome Answers
My interactions with Private Eye started in May 1995, shortly after I'd started bleating on usenet. I tried to get the Eye
interested in my case, as I thought they more than anyone have their finger on the pulse, and would surely already know
something about my case. In my first email to them, entitled "pas de bouteille?" (wot no bottle?), I asked if they had the
nerve to publish what was known to many thousands of people. Their email flunky answered;
Date: Thu, 11 May 95 13:40 BST-1
From: strobes@cix.compulink.co.uk (Private Eye)
Subject: Re: pas de bouteille?
In-Reply-To: <199505102232.SAA19988@freenet.carleton.ca>
Bottle? Dunno really - but I've passed your mail on to the Ed for his
consideration.
Steve Mann
(strobes)
==========================================================
Date: Mon, 15 May 95 12:51 BST-1
From: strobes@cix.compulink.co.uk (Private Eye)
Subject: Re: hello again
In-Reply-To: <199505122236.SAA02574@freenet.carleton.ca>
Hello yourself...
Thanks for the email. Unfortunately, I can't say whether or not the Eye
will do anything with this... I'm only the messenger. As the only
computer-literate peron in the Gnome organisation, I get to read all the
email and then pass it on to the Editor.
Sorry -- not very helpful, I know.
Steve Mann
(strobes)
The following year I gave PE another little prod, which yielded the following;
Date: Tue, 13 Feb 96 11:38 GMT
From: strobes@cix.compulink.co.uk (Private Eye Magazine)
Subject: Re: Previous communication
In-Reply-To: <199602102320.SAA26182@[snip]>
Sorry not to reply sooner... we've been swamped with email and I have
very little time to answer it.
However, the editor sees all the email received here and I'm afraid he
hasn't expressed an interest in your story so I can only assume that he
feels it isn't for us.
Sorry.
strobes
Given that I couldn't provide the evidence to persuade the Eye of the credibility of my claims, I did the next best thing,
which was to take out classified adverts in their "Eye Say" and "Eye Tech" columns. My motivation for doing so is obvious;
the Eye is read both by many thousands of ordinary folk, but also makes its way into the homes and consciousness of the UK's
political and media elite. It is also a known favourite with "Five". What better way of taking the fight to the enemy?
The first small ad appeared on 10 Jan 1997 in issue 915 in "Eye Say". It ran in that column on 24/1/97 and 7/2/97. On 21/2/97
it ran in "Eye Tech", and on 7/3/97 and 21/3/97 again in "Eye Say".
I then changed the ad's wording to read "BBC Newsreaders Conspiracy", and the new wording ran in "Eye Say" from 4/4/97 issue 921,
18/4/97 to 2/5/97. The word "xenophobic" in the first advert had been intended to convey the sense of exclusion through the bigotry
of my enemies, both on the basis of race and mental condition, but it seemed a bit too non-specific. "BBC Newscasters Conspiracy" was
a little more immediate, although readers had to actually wade through the website to find out what it was that the newscasters were
conspiring to do.
My next effort tried to spice up the text. "MI5/BBC Conspiracy" ran for six issues in "Eye Say", from 5/9/97 issue 931 until 31/10/97.
I suppose there is something a little sad about somebody who knows he has mental illness, placing adverts about a conspiracy in which
MI5's watchers enable BBC newscasters to personally and directly communicate with him while reading the news. It is pretty sad, but
unfortunately it is also true, both in the objective reality we all inhabit, as well as in my own mind.
There followed a hiatus of about a year until I resumed advertising on 2 October 1998. I paid over £200 for six months advertising
of the new improved text "MI5 Persecution, BBC Newscasters Spying on my Home". This text ran from issue 960 until issue 972 (19 March
1999) in "Eye Say".
Private Eye's editor Ian Hislop denies knowing anything about my case, as the following email illustrates.
Date: Tue, 3 Nov 1998 14:10 +0000 (GMT Standard Time)
From: strobes@private-eye.co.uk (Private Eye)
Subject: Re: PLEASE ANSWER - THANK YOU
CC: strobes@private-eye.co.uk
Reply-To: strobes@private-eye.co.uk
Sorry to take so long to answer. As soon as the editor
returned from holiday Steve went away. Steve is still away
and so I am answering your letter.
I have asked the editor and he knows nothing about any
conspiracy between M15 and the BBC.
Hope this helps.
Mary Aylmer
Private Eye
I must say I'm quite surprised he knows nothing; the "Eye" is usually well clued up on what's going on.
1871 Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178941
MI5 Persecution: Counter-surveillance sweep by Nationwide Investigations Group
Counter-surveillance sweep by Nationwide Investigations Group
In July 1994 the private detective agency Nationwide Investigations Group conducted an electronic counter-surveillance
sweep of my parents' home in London. They checked for radio transmitter devices, and tested the telephone line for attached
bugs. They found nothing.
I am afraid that I was unsurprised at their not finding any evidence of covert surveillance. It had been made very clear to me,
particularly during 1990-92, that audio, and almost certainly video, surveillance of my parents' home was taking place. But this
would not have been made quite so obvious unless the persecutors were confident of their apparatus being undetectable using the
technology the police, or a private agency like Nationwide, would be using.
I don't know very much about the surveillance technology that has been used against me, but I understand that devices can be built
which switch off on receiving a coded command, and may switch on again after a counter- surveillance sweep has completed; that devices
may rapidly alter the frequency of transmission, "frequency-hopping" devices which presumably cannot be detected in a sequential scan
of the sort employed by Nationwide; and of course "probe" microphones can be inserted "through-the-wall", although I hesitate to
believe our neighbours would permit this.
We paid Nationwide £411.25 (including VAT) for the surveillance sweep, which took them about an hour and a half to complete, using
a "Professional 5000 multi-scanner, CCL UHF scanner and Guideline telephone tap detector." As I said above, I don't know very much
about these things, so I can't comment on the capabilities or otherwise of this equipment. But clearly the "watchers" are using
technology which in 1994 was beyond the detection capabilities of a good private detective agency.
695 Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178940
SBS 2000 and Exchange 2003/2007
Is is possible to add a new member server to a SBS 2000 domain and
have it run Exchange 2003/2007(removing the Exchange 2000 instance)? Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178937
Security Groups
we have a sbs 2000 machine that is the Domain Controller(all the 5 FSMO
roles actually) in our network.
I was testing out Exchange Server 2007 which seemed to require the
Windows 2000 mode (and not Mixed Mode, which supports Pre-Windows
2000). I changed that from Mixed Mode to Windows 2000 mode. Now the
permissions for all the Security Groups seem to be messed up. Is there
anyway I can change the mode of all the security groups to Windows 2000
instead of mixed mode.
thank you.
WS Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178931
Accpac Dos to Access
We are trying to help clients move their data from Accpac Plus in Dos
to a Microsoft Accounting system or alternatively to Office 2000,
MsAccess or Excel.
Can we receive any suggestions on how we should proceed in this
converstion.
Mehran Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178930
how 2 find DNS and Gateway of Other IPs
Hi! i dont hav a high knowledge about Networking.but guys plzz try 2
help me. my IP address is 172.1.28.26 n GW is 172.1.28.1. i scanned al
the IPs os this Rnage i.e. 172.1.28.x. so i saw many users still using
this Range.But i m not able 2 Ping the Gateway. i think the GW is
changed or the DNS. i dont know exactly what has been changed. nut i
want 2 know which GW n DNS thse users r using now.i m able 2 fing their
MAC address n IP through a Scanner. plzz help me fing their DNS &
GAteWay. thnx in advance. Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178927
how 2 find DNS and Gateway of Other IPs
Hi! i dont hav a high knowledge about Networking.but guys plzz try 2
help me. my IP address is 172.1.28.26 n GW is 172.1.28.1. i scanned al
the IPs os this Rnage i.e. 172.1.28.x. so i saw many users still using
this Range.But i m not able 2 Ping the Gateway. i think the GW is
changed or the DNS. i dont know exactly what has been changed. nut i
want 2 know which GW n DNS thse users r using now.i m able 2 fing their
MAC address n IP through a Scanner. plzz help me fing their DNS &
GAteWay. thnx in advance. Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178926
SBS2K3 - Bad sectors on RAID 1
Our server has three disks - one for the system and two disks setup as
RAID 1 array for our data.
We have 652 bad sectors now being reported for the data drive in
Windows. CHKDSK has been run with the /R switch, so I think the bad
sectors are now identified and marked as 'do not use'.
Can we / should we ignore this now, and just monitor that the bad
sector count doesn't increase?
The RAID 1 is via Dell hardware, so I am unsure how to tell which disk
is the faulty one (or in RAID 1 are the bad sectors on both?!).
I guess I can physically remove one disk and run CHKDSK against them in
turn, but in doing this will I destroy the integrity of the RAID 1?
Thanks for any suggestions.
Cheers
Rob Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178923
Please help! New SBS Install missing RDC
All Discussion Groups,
Weird situation. I just noticed that I'm missing Remote Desktop Connection
in the Communications folder of Assessories. Microsoft doesn't appear to
have the download. Does anyone know where RDC resides in the setup program?
Thanks, Doyle Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178908
Song of the Week: Christmas Eve 2006
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
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Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
I've been negligent in posting a "song of the week" for quite some time. =
But, with Christmas a day away, I thought it would be a good time to =
dust off my lyrical brainpower to give everyone some holiday joy. There =
are so many Christmas songs I could choose from ... but what would fit =
this newsgroup? And then it came to me -- Dr. Elmo's hit song from 1979: =
Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer
aka: Bill Gates Got Run Over By His Software
YouTube version of the song: =
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3DvPaGQEskSKM
Chorus:
Bill Gates got run over by his software
Walking home from our house Christmas eve.
You can say there's no such thing as Linux,
But as for me and Ballmer, we believe.
Verse 1:
He'd been drinking too much eggnog,
And we begged him not to go.
But then he forgot his thumbdrive, and he
Staggered out the door into the snow.
When we found him Christmas morning,
At the scene of the attack,
He had WGA stamped on his forehead,
And product keys recorded on his back.
{Chorus}
Bill Gates got run over by his software
Walking home from our house Christmas eve.
You can say there's no such thing as Linux,
But as for me and Ballmer, we believe.
Verse 2:
Now we're all so proud of Ballmer,
He's been taking this so well.
We saw him in there with his X-Box,
Drinking Kool-aid and
chumming with Linus Torvalds.
It's not Christmas without Bill Gates,
All the family's dressed in black
And we just can't help but wonder:
Should we open up his Linux gift box,
Or send it back?
{Chorus}
Bill Gates got run over by his software
Walking home from our house Christmas eve.
You can say there's no such thing as Linux,
But as for me and Ballmer, we believe.
Verse 3:
Now Window's Vista's on the table
And the Office beta is complete
All we need now is new hardware
To get it up and running will be a feat.
I've warned all my friends and neighbors
Better watch out for your house,
They should never give a license
To a man who talks with penguins
and plays with a mouse
{Chorus}
Bill Gates got run over by his software
Walking home from our house Christmas eve.
You can say there's no such thing as Linux,
But as for me and Ballmer, we believe.
--=20
Kevin Weilbacher [SBS-MVP]
"The days pass by so quickly now, the nights are seldom long"
------=_NextPart_000_0006_01C72734.C8D54070
Content-Type: text/html;
charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML><HEAD>
<META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
charset=3Diso-8859-1">
<META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.5730.11" name=3DGENERATOR>
<STYLE></STYLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>I've been negligent in posting a "song =
of the week"=20
for quite some time. But, with Christmas a day away, I thought it would =
be a=20
good time to dust off my lyrical brainpower to give everyone some =
holiday joy.=20
There are so many Christmas songs I could choose from ... but what would =
fit=20
this newsgroup? And then it came to me -- Dr. Elmo's hit song from 1979: =
</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Grandma Got Run Over By a =
Reindeer</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>aka: Bill Gates Got Run Over By His=20
Software</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT size=3D2><FONT face=3DArial>YouTube version of the song: =
</FONT><A=20
href=3D"http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3DvPaGQEskSKM"><FONT face=3DArial =
color=3D#000000>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3DvPaGQEskSKM</FONT></A></=
FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Chorus:</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Bill Gates got run over by his =
software<BR>Walking=20
home from our house Christmas eve.<BR>You can say there's no such thing =
as=20
Linux,<BR>But as for me and Ballmer, we believe.</FONT></DIV><FONT =
size=3D2>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial></FONT><FONT face=3DArial></FONT><FONT=20
face=3DArial></FONT><BR><FONT face=3DArial>Verse 1:</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial>He'd been drinking too much eggnog,<BR>And we =
begged him=20
not to go.<BR>But then he forgot his thumbdrive, and he<BR>Staggered out =
the=20
door into the snow.<BR>When we found him Christmas morning,<BR>At the =
scene of=20
the attack,<BR>He had WGA stamped on his forehead,<BR>And product keys =
recorded=20
on his back.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial>{Chorus}</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial></FONT>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Bill Gates got run over by his =
software<BR>Walking=20
home from our house Christmas eve.<BR>You can say there's no such thing =
as=20
Linux,<BR>But as for me and Ballmer, we =
believe.</FONT></DIV><BR><FONT=20
face=3DArial>Verse 2:</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial>Now we're all so proud of Ballmer,<BR>He's been =
taking=20
this so well.<BR>We saw him in there with his X-Box,<BR>Drinking =
Kool-aid=20
and<BR>chumming with Linus Torvalds.<BR>It's not Christmas without =
Bill=20
Gates,<BR>All the family's dressed in black<BR>And we just can't help =
but=20
wonder:<BR>Should we open up his Linux gift box,<BR>Or send it=20
back?<BR></FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial>{Chorus}<BR></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Bill Gates got run over by his =
software<BR>Walking=20
home from our house Christmas eve.<BR>You can say there's no such thing =
as=20
Linux,<BR>But as for me and Ballmer, we believe.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><BR>Verse 3:</DIV>
<DIV>Now Window's Vista's on the table<BR>And the Office beta is=20
complete<BR>All we need now is new hardware<BR>To get it up and running =
will be=20
a feat.<BR>I've warned all my friends and neighbors<BR>Better watch out =
for your=20
house,<BR>They should never give a license<BR>To a man who talks with=20
penguins</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial>and plays with a mouse</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial>{Chorus}</FONT></FONT></DIV><FONT size=3D2>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial></FONT>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Bill Gates got run over by his =
software<BR>Walking=20
home from our house Christmas eve.<BR>You can say there's no such thing =
as=20
Linux,<BR>But as for me and Ballmer, we =
believe.</FONT></DIV><BR><FONT=20
face=3DArial>-- <BR>Kevin Weilbacher [SBS-MVP]<BR>"The days pass by so =
quickly=20
now, the nights are seldom long"</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial></FONT></FONT> </DIV></BODY></HTML>
------=_NextPart_000_0006_01C72734.C8D54070-- Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178906
Remote Server Monitor
Hi,
I was wondering if there is software that can monitor serveral servers
remotely. I would like to monitor uptime etc..and would also like to be
notified if the servers go off line.
any one have any ideas?
Thanks Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178901
Free instant zero configuration VPN software
The product allows users to create virtual private networks over the
internet. Once the network is created, users can access each others
machines just as if they were on the same local area network. User can
share folders and file, share printers, and much more. In addition, the
Leaf 2006 application includes plugins that capture LAN traffic off one
member's network and route it to the other member's network. These
plugins allow devices such as XBoxs, windows media centers and TiVo, on
one member's network to be shared across the Leaf network. This means
users can play XBox head-to-head, digital media receives can play and
view media from other member's media centers, one TiVO can retrieve
movies from another members TiVO, all across the Internet. The Leaf
2006 application includes a peer-to-peer chat client and a built in
firewall for the Leaf network interface for your protection.
Check it out: http://www.leafnetworks.net Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178893
Try to free up space on Exchange Server 2000
I have a 35 gig hard drive and I have reached the max on it. I have been
deleting emails hoping it would free up space. I am noticing on the server
that the free space is still getting smaller. What do I need to do to free
up the space. Is the deleted emails still hanging around somewhere? I have
heard that doing the backup program in the accessories can free up some of
the files in exchange. I have already gotten rid of all the other files that
I can. My only option is to delete more emails. I would think this would
work because my inboxs are slammed with huge attachments. Please help. We
need this to work by tonight. Thanks everyone.
Allen and Zonya Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178872
SBS2003, Outlook 2003, POP3 from client PC
Hi all,
Current situation:
We have SBS 2000 with three clients.
On these clients we (and by that I mean our boss, the one who pays us)
can get mail though Exchange and we can also send and receive mail
direct through POP3.
New situation
We have just installed a new server with SBS2003 and wanted to go live
tomorrow. At the moment this isn't looking likely. Our mail box on
Exchange is fine, but we cannot send or receive anything through POP3
on the client machines.
I've read lots today and know that many of you hate the idea of using
POP3, but it's not my choice, it's the boss'.
As far as I'm aware, we didn't do anything special on the SBS 2000
setup to get POP3 mail working, it just did (after running the ICW).
Any ideas? At the moment I think I'll be working althrough the night
:-(
By the way, we're not techies. Our SBS knowledge is gleaned from the
net and two books by Russel et al, and Neale et al.
HELP!
Boris Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178871
OT: Trend Micro in the UK
I am being messed about by Network Associates and their supplier in my
attempt to renew a support licence!
I understand Trend Micro comes highly recommended by users in this group.
I assume the product I'm looking for is Client/Server/Messaging Security for
SMB. We have just 7 clients.
However, last time I attempted to get any information at all about the
product here in the UK I was met with total indifference from the supplied
list of 'preferred partners'.
So can anybody from the UK please recommend a company I can contact.
Regards
Chris Curtis Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178867
SBS2k - bad msgs in Exchange
All,
You helped me get out of a hole a while back with Exchange >16GB
database.
We now have some messages which cause Outlook to 'hang' on Client
machines. - I think the messages do not exist, but some sort of
header/pointer does. With a preview pane, if you highlight one of these
messages, you do NOT get a preview of the message, and Outlook locks up.
I have sat at a machine and left it for 15 minutes to see if it finds
the message.
Only way out is Ctrl-Alt-Del.
Will eseutil /p be enough to fix this?
Or, will I need to investigate isinteg?
TIA,
Philip Partridge Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178865
smart host
Hi there
We have an sbs 2000 with exchange and a fixed IP over an ADSL line. Our
problem is that the our IP address is included in a block of address that is
listed as a spam source. Now with the recent surge in spam our legitimate
emails are getting bounced.Our ISP supplier is a monopoly so they could not
care less about his problem.
My question is: could forwarding our email to an SMTP service solve the
problem? I know that there is going to be a cost, but something is better
that nothing. By the way we are thinking about getting one of those antispam
tools too!!! Also do you know somebody who can provide the service.
If you have any pointer please feel free to post them.
Regards
Miguel Sanchez Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178862
Error returned while creating the volume shadow copy:0x80042306
I keep getiing this error on while trying top backup a 2003 server SP1 which
was a upgrade form Small Business server using a Transition Pack. I loaded
the hot fix after doing a google search fopr the error with no change.
Error returned while creating the volume shadow copy:0x80042306.
I have a trace file if anyone can make sense of it ?? Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178861
Cannot VPN into nor use OWA on own server
On Friday I 'suddenly' lost the ability to access my server over the
internet (we only advertsie a VPN and OWA), which had been workign fine
for the past couple of years(!).
On this machine my laptop - all my other VPN & OWA connections (to my
client's systems) work fine.
The problem is the same whether I am on my LAN in the office, on my
home LAN or using a 3G card remotely.
We canot find anything that triggered this, nor can I find a solution.
Any ideas?
Cheers
Rob Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178857
Exchange Crashes on Help
I'm in the process of setting up SBS2003. I installed SBS2003 and applied
all the udpates, including the latests service packs to both SBS2003 and
Exchange. Everything seems to be working until I go the Exchange System
Manager and pull up any Help files.
Whenever any help within Exchange is envoked, Exchange System Manager just
crashes and I receive the following error:
"Microsoft Intelligent Message Filter has encountered a problem and needs to
close. We are sorry for the inconvenience."
Error siganture is:
AppName: contentfilter.dll AppVer: 6.5.7638.1 AppStamp: 430e739c
ModName: hhctrl.ocx ModVer: 5.2.3790.2744 ModStamp: 44b3a49e
fDebug: 0 Offset: 00013368
Any suggestions as to the cause and fix for this? SBS2003 has SP1
installed. I tried re-installing SP2 for Exchange but nothing changed. My
last option seems to be to uninstall Exchange and reinstall from scratch, but
I think that will also force me to uninstall SP1 for SBS2003 since it
requires Exchange SP. Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178842
Managing Outlook autoarchive settings in group policy...
I would like to implement archive settings through group policy in our
domain. We have SBS 2000 and are using Outlook 2002 clients. How can I go
about doing this?
Thanks, Brad Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178836
Slow response in SBS Admin Console
In the tree, opening stuff like Computer Management (local) is immediate,
but other stuff, like First Organisation (Exchange) and Active Directory
Users and Computers takes around 30seconds each time. Similarly, looking at
users if I right click for properties it again takes a while before the
properties are displayed.
The hardware is a 3GHz Xeon with 2GB RAM, so it's not lacking in that
department.
Any suggestions?
Regards Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178828
compress folder before backup.
I have a win2ksbs server with a dds4 tape drive using the native win2k
ntbackup software for nightly backups. I do have hardware compression
enabled but I am still getting only about 24gigs of backup on a 20/40 tape.
I have one particular directory (the "documents") that is very large (19.6
Gb) with 127,843 files and 25,697 folders that I would like to compress into
a single file using some sort of winzip like utility.
Can anyone recommend a good program for this (or a better solution) that
would keep the directory structure, the file permissions, the shareing
permissions, be quick, and add only changed files nightly?
Thank you!
Joe Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178825
Exchange timing out
We have Small Business Server 2000 and it has been timing out
repeatedly in the last two months when users try to retrieve mail.
There are only two users. I was out sick for the two days, plus the
weekend, so I had over 400 messages. It took from 9:30 to 1:30 to get
them. I use a program to get only the message headers. It would get
30-40 messages, and then time out.
My boss uses Outlook and it takes forever to download just a little
mail. Additionally, for her, the server is keeping the message, not
deleting it as her client is configured.
I am at my wits end, and do not know where to go from here. Our admin
person is busy until January - any help here perhaps? If someone can
give me a clue I will be most grateful.
TIA
--
Adrienne Boswell at work
Administrator nextBlock.com
http://www.nextblock.com/
Please respond to the group so others can share Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178824
Recipient Filter ??
Hi All
Seeing an influx of surnameusername@company.com, also support, admin,
billing also.
Any ideas if there is a recipient filter in SBS 2000 ?, Wicked one that
works in SBS 2003... ;-)
TIA Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178821
Canon IR3300i and SBS
Well, this one has me stumped.
I have a canon ir3300 connected to a small business server. It prints
well, no problems. The issue is with the scanning.
When I set up the one-touch button for the scanning project, it gives
me the chance to choose between sbs or ftp. Choosing sbs, I am allowed
on the printer to scan the network.
When I scan the network, I can see the sbs server as well as all the
workstations on the network. I can browse directly to any workstation
shares, and sucessfully scan to it. However, when I try to browse the
sbs server, it prompts me for authentication. When I enter the admin
user name and password, it comes back with an error that the user name
and password are invalid and it cannot connect.
Using the same user name and password, I can connect directly to the
server.
Any suggestions?
Thanks.
Allan Geary
allangeary@senditstore.com Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178818
XP Clients with SBS2000
I've upgraded 4 of our users to XP pro, and somehow I keep making a mess of
configuring the client PC.
This is the procedure I just followed for another new (out of the box Dell)
PC:
At the SBS box add a new user, JohnDoe and a new computer JohnD.
At the client box first start up, during XP installation/configuration give
the username, JohnDoe, and the computer name, JohnD.
The client PC then starts up as local user, JohnDoe. I then follow KB316418
to join the XP client to the SBS domain, for example MYDOMAIN.
Re-boot the client PC, this time logging on as JohnDoe on MYDOMAIN.
Again follow KB316418 to install the firewall client. At this time I get
Error 1925 - insufficient priviledges.
In the client PC User Accounts I note that user JohnDoe is only a member of
the JohnD domain, so I create another user JohnDoe, member of MYDOMAIN,
standard user group.
Re-boot the PC and log on again as JohnDoe. Still have error 1925 when I try
to install the FW client. Log off JohnDoe and log on as Administrator on
JohnD. This time the FW client installs OK.
Log off Administrator and log on as JohnDoe on MYDOMAIN. Internet access is
forbidden.
In the client PC User Accounts I change JohnDoe to Administrators group.
Internet access is now possible.
So I get there in the end, but it is all a bit laborious, and I'm not happy
about making my user a local Administrator - or is that a necessary step?
Question - is there a slicker method of arriving where I want to be?
Regards Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178812
Remote Desktop Connection to branch network failing
We're trying to hook up our workstations to a branch site. I've set up
a connection one the server as a persistant connection to the branch
via VPN (L2TP) which is connected fine. This I've done under RRAS as a
new interface.
I can connect to the two servers on the remote network using RDC but
only from the server. I cannot connect from any of the workstations on
my home network.
I have set up static routes to the two servers I need and these are
directed to use the branch interface.
I'm totally stuck as to why these aren't working. If I tracert one of
the remote servers from a workstation I can reach the server but then
the connection times out.
Any and all help most appreciated.
Mike Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178808
Limited system partition
I have inherited a Windows 2000 small business server, with the c: partition
(system partition) having only 200 MB free. What can I do?
The D: drive has 75G available, how feasible is it to resize the C:
partition, reallocating some of the space available on D?
Should I move to a new server windows 2003 small business server, if it was
not for the limited space on C: their would be know need to upgrade?
what are my options? Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178801
OWA over pvt SSL cert to mobile phone?
Hi,
Can the Subj work?
I have been asked to setup OWA for a client (SBS 2000 premium (w' ISA
server) - and I would like to secure it via a private SSL certifcate.
Only I wonder how this would work if you have a web capable mobile
phone?
The phone in question (specifically) is a Palm 1 Treo.
--
Duncan Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178796
conflicts with WAP on LAN
Our network is setup as follows:
DSL modem --> Sonicwall Firewall/Router --> 24-port 10/100/1000Base-T
Switch --> [cat5 to each workstation]
Currently we are trying to install a WAP in one of our offices to
provide our on site programmer with the ability to send/receive data
from a Dell Axim PDA to any of our workstations. The WAP is a Linksys
WRT54G which happens to double as a 4-port switch. Our mission is to
replace the 4-port hub we currently have in that office with this
WAP/switch.
As of right now the WAP/switch is hooked up to a Cat5 wall outlet
properly and my laptop, the programmer's laptop, and the PDA can all
ping the WAP. All wireless devices can also ping the other two
workstations hard wired into the ports on the switch. So basically, any
and all devices contained in that specific office can talk to each
other fine.
Where the problem lies is in the fact that we cannot connect to any of
the workstations outside of that office.
Any suggestions?
//markus Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178795
SBS 2000 Licenses
Hello,
How many CALs does SBS 2000 come with by default? I have the SBS 2000
Installation CDs and also a Floppy Disk with 5 Client Add Pack.
Does the CDs include 5 when you install it?
Does this mean that with the CDs and diskette I have 10 CALs?
Thanks Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178793
Windows 2000 SBS licenses
One of my clients just bought Windows 2003 SBS licenses for his Windows 2000
SBS server.
How do i downgrade the licenses so that i can install it on Windows 2000 SBS
as well were to i get the floppy to install the licenses for the server.
thank you
--
Paul Pociecha
Computer System Technician Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178790
small business 2003 server compatability
Stupid question, I want to load UPS Worldship software, UPS said the minimium
operating system is Windows 2000 service pack 4 will this run on my small
business 2003 server? Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178784
Restore a user profile
We have managed to lose a user profile (desktop settings, roaming profile
etc).
We can recreate it but, my first question is, can we restore it?
We've been making backups of our server for ages. Now, when we need to
restore this data we don't know where to find it!
My second question is, can anyone tell me where this info is kept on the
server?
--
-
Regards
Boris Merryweather Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178783
Reinstalling SQL 2000 from SBS 2003 - HELP
I am trying to reinstall SQL 2000 on a SBS 2003 Premium system. I do not
want to have to reinstall the entire system, just SQL 2000. I was having
problems with one of the databases in SQL and thought I would start over with
a new intsallation. I know with SBS 2000 you could simply find the
installation directory on the disk, but I can't seem to find it with SBS 2003.
Can anyone tell me how I can do this install without reinstalling the entire
SBS 2003 system?
Thanks! Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178781
Moving INstallation
I have just purchased SBS 2003 and am looking to install in the next couple
of days. In the mean time, I have an extra Dell PowerEdge server that I want
to install my current SBS 2000 on so I will have as little downtime as
possible. I will install SBS 2003 on my new server as the other works for
now. Problem is I am not allowed to add my cals without calling Microsoft
and getting a password. I am doing exactly what the technical support file
on the CAL disk says to do. I just called Microsoft and the lady I taked to
says I have to pay for the technical support. All I need is the password for
the reinstall of the CAL's. I have a 20 CAL disk and a 5 CAL disk. Am I
calling the wrong group or can I do it online. Any help would be great.
Allen Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178775
Defrag Exchange database
MS recommend at least 110% of the database size as free space before
attempting to defrag a database with eseutil.
If I have let myself get into a situation where there is insufficient free
space, is it possible to dismount the store, copy the files across to a
drive with spare space, perform a defrag, then copy back and re-mount?
Regards Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178774
Users dropped?
Hello!
We are having problem with a smallbiz2000 server, it seems like the users
are being dropped by the server, and "only" after a password reset users can
access the shares and outlook again. And it also seems like users are logon
cached into the server? The problem occour once in a week minimum. We have
updated the server.
Please help
BR
Robin Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178773
Shared Fax SBS 2000 with XP Pro client
After i added xp pro clients to the sbs2000 network the shared fax give's me
an error when ever i want to connect it with it. Has anyone any ideas for
me????? Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178770
POP3 Deleting Email
Email is being picked up from email pop host account, but it is not being
distributed to internal email accounts. Can send/receive internal emails
fine. Can send external emails fine. Just can not get an external email to
be delivered to an internal mailbox. Was working fine friday morning and
friday afternoon email just stopped coming in. I have verified that email
is sitting at the host until the pop3 connector picks it up. Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178760
the wizard was interrupted before microsoft shared fax
The SBS 2000 server and the Shared Fax Server component have been working
fine for some time now. For some reason, the Shared Fax Server was removed
and now when I try to reinstall it .
I get an error message: Microsoft Shared Fax Setup error.
"The wizard was interrupted before Microsoft Shared Fax could completely be
installed."
Any ideas and suggestions would be greatly Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178754
SMTP connector unavailable
I have a client running SBS 2000 with a dynamic IP address. I have
repeatedly tried to get this converted to static but no one will listen to
me. Naturally, outbound e-mail is a problem. I tried using a smarthost for
all the outbound e-mail, but the outbound mail queue would get stuck until I
switched it back to DNS. But when I use DNS, then AOL and others get cranky
because it's a dynamic IP. Finally, I set up a second SMTP connector just
for AOL and its ilk, leaving everything else on DNS. I had about one or two
dozen domains on the smarthost. This seemed to work for a long time, but
yesterday the client called complaining that the e-mail routed through the
smarthost was not making it out. When we look at the status of the smarthost
SMTP connector, it shows "unavailable." Right-clicking on it and starting it
releases the mail, but shortly afterward the connector goes down again. The
smarthost (a cable ISP) pings okay, and I was able to set up Outlook Express
on the server with an account at the ISP, which worked fine. I need at a
minimum that the smarthost connector resets itself it it goes down so that
the mail eventually goes out. Where do I go from here? Tag: DFS Directory Path Tag: 178749