
12:18:02, Info Setting UILanguage setting to en-US succeded. 12:18:02, Info Setting UILanguage setting. 12:18:02, Info Found unattend setting "UserLocale" with value: "en-US". 12:18:02, Info Found unattend setting "Systemlocale" with value: "en-US". 12:18:02, Info Unattended setting "UILanguageFallback" could not be found (2). 12:18:02, Info Starting MuiUnattend.exe GC 12:18:02, Info muiunattend is called with pass: specialize 12:18:02, Info Found unattend setting "UILanguage" with value: "en-US". 12:15:19, Info Found unattend file: 12:15:19, Info Found generalization state, setup.exe completion flag -> launching setup.exe. 12:15:18, Info UnattendSearchExplicitPath: Found usable unattend file for pass at. 12:15:18, Info UnattendSearchExplicitPath: Found unattend file at examining for applicability. 12:15:18, Info Setup has not completed, adding pending reboot. Here are the two error logs from C:\Windows\Panther\UnattendGC setupact.log 12:15:18, Info - 12:15:18, Info WinDeploy.exe launched with command-line.
#Professor frink catchphrase Pc#
Usually a reboot of the PC will fix the problem, but what causes it in the first place? A few FYI's: The data servers are 2003, SP1 I can't use logon scripts, so this is how I have to map everyone's home folder I don't control the DNS servers or Domain Controllers, I'm just one piece of a much larger org. So whenever this happens, his H: drive would show up like this: \\server name\home So whenever this happens, the user's H: drive is showing all of the other users' folders (w/o access, of course, due to security settings). But oddly enough, whatever the problem is, it's not simply causing the H: drive to not connect - it drops down one folder. The path to their H: drive would look like this in their Active Directory properties, under the Profile tab: \\server name\home\jsmith Every once in a while, when a user logs on, their H: drive doesn't map correctly. The local file path to the home folders as they reside on the server looks like this: C:\Data\Home\username (The "Home" folder is set as shared, and each username has their own folder). But every once in a while the folder doesn't map correctly. I'm at my wit's end.įor all of my users, I use Active Directory to map their home folders, under the "Profile" tab in the user's properties. I tried converting the "doc" file to a "docx" file - no change.
#Professor frink catchphrase install#
I did a plain install with no patches, then added that single Hotfix - no change. I found KB article # 937496 that included a Hotfix which is supposed to be a part of SP1.

I tried doing a bare-bones install of Office 2007 without SP1 or any hotfixes - no change. I read somewhere online that it might be related to the "Save as PDF" add-in, so I did a new install without the add-in - no change.

A few things I've tried already: I've tried changing all sorts of settings within Word 2007 and also the settings of the picture, but there's no change. Weird, huh? I asked around the office, but no one remembers who created this template or when, so I don't know what the original source image was (if that even matters). And that screenshot with the black box is exactly as it looks. As you can see, the picture file in the header is fine, but the other image is screwy. I attached screenshots of both - the first is Word 2002, and the other is Word 2007. We have some Word documents created in an older version, and the image files are apearing in Word 2007 as a black box.
