Can you say that again with some
examples?
Al From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Douglas M. Long Sent: Friday, September 10, 2004 10:43 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: [ActiveDir] Logon types OK, this may be a
stupid question, but here it goes. If I login to a client
machine with username and domain how does that differ from [EMAIL PROTECTED] and local machine. My
suspicion is that when logging in locally with the UPN (is that the correct
term) that a ticket is only granted at the time an application needs some
credentials, whereas logging into the domain grabs a ticket immediately. Is this
correct thinking? The reason I ask is
because a user has been logging on with the [EMAIL PROTECTED] and local machine and
has been having problems with outlook (exchange), but when logged into the
domain all is well. It makes sense to me, but not for a particular reason. Any
info is much appreciated.
Thanks |
- [ActiveDir] Logon types Douglas M. Long
- Re: [ActiveDir] Logon types ASB
- RE: [ActiveDir] Logon types Mulnick, Al
- RE: [ActiveDir] Logon types Douglas M. Long
- Re: [ActiveDir] Logon types Paul Wilkinson
- Re: [ActiveDir] Logon types Paul van Geldrop
- RE: [ActiveDir] Logon types Mulnick, Al
- RE: [ActiveDir] Logon types Renouf, Phil
- RE: [ActiveDir] Logon types Lou Vega
- RE: [ActiveDir] Logon types Douglas M. Long
- RE: [ActiveDir] Logon types Renouf, Phil
- [ActiveDir] Deactivating Schema Attributes David Adner