tdehan wrote: > I have no idea what this means..." I own a lot of MSFT stock, but that > doesn't make my Windows machines run any better." > > . . .
It means exactly the same as "I work for the company". In other words, it's completely irrelevant to troubleshooting your issue or determining whether Windows is the cause for it. It certainly doesn't justify not temporarily disabling defender and their firewall programs to eliminate them from the troubleshooting tree. Disabling scanning programs and utilities that block or otherwise interrupt other program operation and resource access is standard protocol. This happens increasingly with many third-party applications. If when you do so, the blocked or stalled program suddenly starts functioning, then you have located the offender. Why you resist this step, I do not understand. You will reenable them later and then you can adjust the settings to allow an exception. As I and others have intimated, you may have an elevated and/or conflicted permissions and/or sharing settings issue with Windows. But I would start with the most common and obvious causes for when these things happen: temporarily disabling overzealous AV and other security utilities. It at a minimum gets them out of the way to more efficiently conduct further troubleshooting. You seem fixated entirely on LMS as the cause of this issue, and resist everyone's OS and other networking diagnostic recommendations. You can keep uninstalling and re-installing LMS until the cows come home. It is apparently not solving your problem. I suggest that you consider some of the other suggestions that are being made by me and others that do not necessarily involve LMS. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ sgmlaw's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=13995 View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=109856 _______________________________________________ Touch mailing list [email protected] http://lists.slimdevices.com/mailman/listinfo/touch
