Dwelling FAQ Archives Tags Random Login New Consumer Tags: windows2003 startupscripts batchfiles Share: Twitter Facebook Thank you for clicking,
Windows 7 Pro, I'll try and be brief. I'm within a hugely locked-down Windows XP and 2003 server natural environment run by techs who're also distracted and busy to assist a great deal. I've created a piece of management computer software for your workstations in VB.NET. I like to deploy it to 20 workstations as being a beta check. It will be an executable that has to run on startup on the machine rather then a user basis (a lot of unique consumers on these couple of test devices). Installation isn't really an issue - it just has to be described as on startup, any time. The techs have allowed me to run a batch file on startup which is described as from your Win 2003 server logon scripts - that are on their own batch files that they run to setup shares and so on. It is controlled from your group policy (here I get lost). Ideal, you'll presume, *but* - both my system runs and practically nothing else does (ie: due to the fact it isn't going to terminate and 'go away' the workstation hangs and then the user can't do anything at all until finally I kill my program) - or,
Office Professional 2007, if I try to shell - applying shellexec from a plan or 'start' or any other shell or spawn trick,
Office 2010 Pro Plus Key, almost nothing takes place,
Purchase Office 2007, my program seems to run and after that just disappears - I cannot see it and it cannot see me. I should really add that manually,
Microsoft Office 2007 Pro, from the command prompt all the things is great, I can shell and return towards the person with my program working perfectly. Any tips? The whole natural environment is considerably over-managed - I can't go near the registry, can not compose to crucial elements with the tough disk and there is certainly no startup folder. I also have to keep items very straightforward for the techs, who at any minute may possibly get fed up and just inform me to get lost. I will not wish to get into deployment and policies with them, doing official changes around the network normally takes months, if it comes about in any way (it very seldom does). They have quietly slipped me this batch file, this chance. How can I utilize it simply to load a straightforward system? I can of course make any adjust I want to the plan. If there were an equivalent with the old 'Terminate and keep resident' call, that will probably do it. VB.NET 2005. Sorry to go on. I've set lots of get the job done into this and am close to despair. I've Googled to death. Any thoughts?