Bill
Sat Oct 16 09:31:05 CDT 2004
Hi Amos...just to add to Marina's
If there is a vpn connection and the user is just using outlook then you
will not know they are connected unless you look in routing and remote
access. Also Terminal Sessions without looking in Terminal Services Manager.
--
www.smallbizserver.net (2000 and 2003)
microsoft.public.backoffice.smallbiz2000 (2000 NG)
microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs (2003 NG)
http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&safe=off&group=microsoft.public.backoffice.smallbiz2000
http://groups.google.com/groups?hl=en&lr=lang_en&ie=UTF-8&safe=off&group=microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs
http://www.sbslinks.com/
"Marina Roos [SBS-MVP]" <marina@roos.nodontwantspam.nl.com> wrote in message
news:e0OV8o3sEHA.220@TK2MSFTNGP15.phx.gbl...
> Hi Amos,
>
> Have a look at the Shared Folders in ComputerManagement. There you can see
> who is logged in and which files they have open.
>
> --
> Regards,
>
> Marina
> Microsoft SBS-MVP
>
> "Amos Sobel" <Amos Sobel@discussions.microsoft.com> schreef in bericht
> news:9F947644-3B9C-4E75-A9A8-F0BEB9ADAB84@microsoft.com...
>> I did recently redo my SBS2000 from scratch. All the old bugs are gone
>> and
>> the server works fine except that all my old utility collection is gone.
>> I find out that a pure Windows2000 SP4 does not have a utility that shows
>> who is logged in to the server and enables the administrator to force
> users
>> logoff as did the good old WinNT SP6 Server.
>> Does anybody know how to do it?
>> Any help is welcome
>>
>>
>
>