From: DaveMills on 30 Mar 2010 00:31 On Mon, 29 Mar 2010 15:49:25 -0500, Matthew <no(a)example.com> wrote: >Sorry. I'm not explaining myself very well. > >I've created a mandatory profile for my terminal server users and copied >it to a share on the network. Now I go into the GP Editor and under the >terminal server settings I set the path to the mandatory profile and >also set the terminal server to use the mandatory profile. Of course >this is a computer setting and not a user setting so it applies the >mandatory to all users including the administrators which I don't want >to use the mandatory profiles. I was not aware that this could be set up using group policy. In the past this needed to be set in the settings for each user in ADUC. I have no idea how the user settings interact with the GPO settings. It looks like the GPO should take priority which will not help you. >What I was hoping to accomplish is being >able to apply different mandatory profiles to user groups through group >policy, but I have yet to figure it out without manually entering the >path for each user. > >At any rate I think what I want to accomplish isn't really possible the >way I hoped to accomplish it. -- Dave Mills There are 10 types of people, those that understand binary and those that don't.
From: Mervyn Zhang [MSFT] on 29 Mar 2010 21:15
Hello, The managed support service of the newsgroup Windows Server General is now available instead on: Windows Server http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/category/windowsserver Would you please repost the question in the forum with the Windows Live ID used to access your Subscription benefits? Our engineers will assist you in the new platform. In the future, please post Windows Server related questions directly to the forums. If you have any questions or concerns, please feel free to contact us: tngfb(a)microsoft.com. Regards, Mervyn Zhang Microsoft Online Community Support ================================================== This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. |