When I was creating a new account in XP for a woman called Helen who is being given the computer, the system told me it wouldn't let me create an account named either "Helen, Administrator or Guest".
I wondered if anyone knew why?
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When I was creating a new account in XP for a woman called Helen who is being given the computer, the system told me it wouldn't let me create an account named either "Helen, Administrator or Guest".
I wondered if anyone knew why?
The computer name wouldn't happen to be "Helen", would it? XP doesn't let you name user accounts after the computer name for some reason (I just tried it out on Vista, and it's no problem there).
I am running XP Pro SP2... I just created a user named Helen with no problems... I agree with Negative. Check to see what the computer name is. I tried searching google for "xp user account" helen ... xp login helen ... and xp user helen ... but could not find anyone else that shared your issue.
Isn't Helen the name of Bill Gates wife? I thought you couldn't create user accounts under the name "Bill" or "Helen"?
.....or maybe the Wolfman is simply making this up..... Who knows! ?!?
It's Melinda :P
I think the Wolfman is on to something!
like Y2K... =)
Looks like a "Trojan" to me.................
"Helen of Troy" ............ "the face that launched a thousand ships"?
:jack:elkgrin
LOL! Nice one Nihil!Quote:
Originally Posted by nihil
Yup! You guessed it! The computer was called ..... Helen. It's now known as jesmond and "User" has been successfully renamed Helen.
Why can't M$ employ articulate programmers? Rather than tell me "you can't create an account called administrator, helen or guest", how much more helpful to say "user names must not be identical to pc name"
They can't write articulate stuff because they're too busy reading the error messages that we all send.
lol, some of those error messages would have to be very interesting indeed.
As far as user account names.. I wasn't aware that Xp prevented you from naming it the same as the machine name. I really appreciate that tidbit. I'd never had a problem because, in the case of the machine I'm working with now, I call it "SalmonPatty2149" and my account log on happens to be my first name.
I have never understood that goofy rule...Drove me bonkers until I learned about it.Quote:
The computer was called ..... Helen. It's now known as jesmond and "User" has been successfully renamed Helen.
So why is it a computer name can't match a user name? Please tell the Wolfman more :)Quote:
Originally Posted by AngelicKnight
I believe it has to do with active directory....it would create duplicates
old school is to use name01 for computername
MLF
But I think this problem occured in Windows 95 when Active Directory was nothing more then a itch in Bill Gates pants.
Ya know I don't thinks that's it. Different OU's and all that.Quote:
Originally Posted by morganlefay
/MUST find out why
Its gotta be a network thing....
an MS network thing
Netbios, wins
MLF
Its WINS...
it keeps track of both USERNAME and COMPUTERNAME
http://technet2.microsoft.com/window....mspx?mfr=true
and exchange 2003 still needs it...
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/837391Quote:
SYMPTOMS
In larger Microsoft Exchange Server 2003 organizations and larger Microsoft Exchange 2000 Server organizations, some operations do not work correctly if NetBIOS name resolution is not working on the network.
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CAUSE
Exchange 2003 and Exchange 2000 still have several NetBIOS dependencies. You may have to use NetBIOS name resolution across different subnets for the successful operation of all Exchange components, depending on the network topology.
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RESOLUTION
Microsoft recommends that Exchange organizations use Windows Internet Name Service (WINS) and DNS for name resolution. Installations of Exchange 2003 and Exchange 2000 in large and subnetted organizations without WINS have not been fully tested. In large organizations, NetBIOS name resolution through broadcasts may not function correctly. Some Exchange functionality may also be affected.
MLF
Explains the insane machine name pattern at work.
We're using exchange 2003 for most of our workstations.
Our airport code and 24 random number/letters
It's a licensing thing...Helen can't exist in more than one instance on the network. Users and workstations can't share the same name for that reason. The workstation qualifies as a network even if it is just one machine. It makes the Windows environment's head asplode.
O