If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Copying the configuration from ne PC or user to another
I have 10 PCs running XP HOME/SP3 in a small business I own. Each PC
has 3 active users (the admimistrator, a staff account, and a customer account). The staff and customer accounts are all limited accounts. I want to make all 10 PCs as identical as possible. This includes screen savers, font sizes, and in-numerable other settings. Installing identical versions of programs on all the pcs is a hassle, but I can do it. Currently, the machines are not on a network. Is there any way I can copy the configuration for the staff limited account on one pc to the staff account on another PC without sitting in front of a pc and manually setting up hundreds of individual settings? All the PCs are absolutely identical. The only difference I know about is the serial number on the licensed copy of XP/HOME. |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Copying the configuration from ne PC or user to another
There is, although it gets involved.
The first obvious issue is the windows serial number/Key. Next has to do with a unique machine ID that is generated during the install process, and the name of each P/C. Some of these issues also exist with the Applications software, such as Office and some retail applications. Finally, you need to decide if a user accounts are "global" to all P/Cs, or local, tied to each users P/C. It sounds like you want globals, but having more than one instance of the same global user active can be a problem. A last, but not least issue has to do with the windows version. OEM, Corporate, Retail, etc. and the fact that you are talking about XP Home. For instance, if you had "unconfigured" OEM packs, utilities are included to make much of what you want to do easier. Basically, what you end up doing, is cloning a custom configured version, changing the Key on install/startup, and then adding the unique user configuration you want. It's possible to use computer management to import and export users, at least on the professional version of XP. The P/Cs need to be more or less isolated, until they have unique valid "Keys" etc. What you want to do is more or less what an OEM does when they produce the generic "master" for a bunch of the same model P/Cs, and load it into hard drives. There is a "slipstream" process that can be modified to generate the "master" image. Search the web using the term slipstream XP. MSDN and TecNet used to contain quite a bit of info on the process. Unfortunately XP is in the sunset, and it's possible that the info has been removed. With 10 P/Cs Imight consider adding a business server. David wrote in message ... I have 10 PCs running XP HOME/SP3 in a small business I own. Each PC has 3 active users (the admimistrator, a staff account, and a customer account). The staff and customer accounts are all limited accounts. I want to make all 10 PCs as identical as possible. This includes screen savers, font sizes, and in-numerable other settings. Installing identical versions of programs on all the pcs is a hassle, but I can do it. Currently, the machines are not on a network. Is there any way I can copy the configuration for the staff limited account on one pc to the staff account on another PC without sitting in front of a pc and manually setting up hundreds of individual settings? All the PCs are absolutely identical. The only difference I know about is the serial number on the licensed copy of XP/HOME. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Copying the configuration from ne PC or user to another
There is, although it gets involved.
The first obvious issue is the windows serial number/Key. Next has to do with a unique machine ID that is generated during the install process, and the name of each P/C. Some of these issues also exist with the Applications software, such as Office and some retail applications. Finally, you need to decide if a user accounts are "global" to all P/Cs, or local, tied to each users P/C. It sounds like you want globals, but having more than one instance of the same global user active can be a problem. A last, but not least issue has to do with the windows version. OEM, Corporate, Retail, etc. and the fact that you are talking about XP Home. For instance, if you had "unconfigured" OEM packs, utilities are included to make much of what you want to do easier. Basically, what you end up doing, is cloning a custom configured version, changing the Key on install/startup, and then adding the unique user configuration you want. It's possible to use computer management to import and export users, at least on the professional version of XP. The P/Cs need to be more or less isolated, until they have unique valid "Keys" etc. What you want to do is more or less what an OEM does when they produce the generic "master" for a bunch of the same model P/Cs, and load it into hard drives. There is a "slipstream" process that can be modified to generate the "master" image. Search the web using the term slipstream XP. MSDN and TecNet used to contain quite a bit of info on the process. Unfortunately XP is in the sunset, and it's possible that the info has been removed. With 10 P/Cs Imight consider adding a business server. David wrote in message ... I have 10 PCs running XP HOME/SP3 in a small business I own. Each PC has 3 active users (the admimistrator, a staff account, and a customer account). The staff and customer accounts are all limited accounts. I want to make all 10 PCs as identical as possible. This includes screen savers, font sizes, and in-numerable other settings. Installing identical versions of programs on all the pcs is a hassle, but I can do it. Currently, the machines are not on a network. Is there any way I can copy the configuration for the staff limited account on one pc to the staff account on another PC without sitting in front of a pc and manually setting up hundreds of individual settings? All the PCs are absolutely identical. The only difference I know about is the serial number on the licensed copy of XP/HOME. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|