Wait-- there is still a goldbox?
'Potential'
Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?
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I was just going to say, I've been looking everywhere for my gold box.
blinks
I know there's a joke in there somewhere.
It will take a better man than me to search it out.
I definitely still have a gold box. It's a tiny little box icon next to the "Sign Out" thing at the top.
I have a supid question. The person that creates new e-mail ids at my new job has been out, so I'm using the old person's e-mail till they can get my id created.
But, I thought I'd be all smart and change the name, so it still says it's coming from me. Where do you do that in Outlook? I can't find it, and it's making me crazy.
On mine, it is: Tools ==> Services
Then I select, Internet Email and Properties.
Huh. There is no "Services." I wonder if only the administrator can do it.
Hmm. It might be that your mail server is configured so you can't make changes like that.
OK, one of our servers has been moved to a DMZ, so I can no longer get to it by mapping it as a network drive in Windows Explorer. Because it's in the DMZ it's no longer part of our domain.
I'm fairly clueless when it comes to Windows networking and all that Active Directory crap. So, do we have to make this server be its own domain controller (with active directory) or can we make it still be part of our domain even though it's not on the same network as our other 'puters? (The way it is now I can't map to it because it has no domain controller.) I have tried telling our domain controller where to find the DMZ'd computer but couldn't get it to work.
eta: Or are we stuck with FTPing to this computer?
Hack found. Thanks, guys.
I'm not an expert in securing Windows servers, but enabling file sharing or AD on a DMZ system sounds like a bad idea.