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Friday, January 28, 2011

SystemAdmins Tool - Discover Active Directory permissions in seconds

Tool to Discover Active Directory permissions in seconds.

 

 

Key Features:

 

  • Get a complete hierarchical view of the effective permissions and access rights for a specific file folder (NTFS) or share drive.
  • Easily see what permissions a user has for an object and why (group membership or direct permissions).
  • See it all from a totally cool desktop dashboard.
  • Browse permissions by group or individual user.
  • Analyze user permissions based on group membership combined with specific permissions.

 

SolarWinds Permission Analyzer Tool – Download it now

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Tech News - Microsoft mocks Google's Web video decision

Microsoft mocks Google's Web video decision

 

A Microsoft evangelist has mocked Google's decision to remove H.264 video support from Chrome, implying that Google is trying to impose an edict on an industry that's already made up its mind to the contrary.

In a blog post, Tim Sneath, who runs Windows and Web evangelism for Microsoft, likens Google's WebM video codec to the utopian but unsuccessful Esperanto language. The blog post rewrites Google's original announcement that the company is removing support for the widely used H.264 codec to advance its own WebM.

Both technologies can be used with the nascent HTML5 standard to embed video directly into Web pages without using a plug-in such as Adobe Systems' Flash Player. But Microsoft's Internet Explorer 9 beta and Apple's Safari support H.264, while Opera and Mozilla's Firefox support WebM and the earlier, largely unsuccessful Ogg Theora technology for encoding and decoding video. Sneath wrote:

The Esperanto language was invented last century as a politically neutral language that would foster peace and international understanding...We are supporting the Esperanto and Klingon languages, and will consider adding support for other high-quality constructed languages in the future. Though English plays an important role in speech today, as our goal is to enable open innovation, its further use as a form of communication in this country will be prohibited and our resources directed towards languages that are untainted by real-world usage.

Sneath hyperlinks "Esperanto" references to the WebM Project, "Klingon" to Theora, and "English" to the Wikipedia entry for H.264. (He doesn't attempt to draw any parallels between the difficulties of learning English and the expense of licensing H.264 patents.)

The post is titled "An Open Letter from the President of the United States of Google." And in a tweet, Sneath referred to Google's decision as "despotism."

Clearly, the post is snarky and jocular. But it still can be included as an example of the backlash against Google's H.264 move.

Microsoft is among the patent holders that receives payments when the MPEG LA licenses the H.264 pool of patents, but Microsoft said it pays more to the licensing group for including H.264 support in Windows 7 than it receives in royalty payments from the group.



Read more: http://news.cnet.com/8301-30685_3-20028384-264.html#ixzz1BMQZ7jVt

Friday, January 14, 2011

Outlook 2010 gives error while booking resource or sending invite

Direct Booking does not successfully book a resource in Outlook 2010

 

Error like: Direct Booking does not successfully book a resource in Outlook 2010

 

To resolve this problem, use one of the following methods to configure registry data to enable Outlook direct booking:

  • Modify the registry manually
  • Configure the registry by using Group Policy
  • Deploy the registry data by using the Office Customization Tool

 

Method 1: Manual modification of the registry

Important This section, method, or task contains steps that tell you how to modify the registry. However, serious problems might occur if you modify the registry incorrectly. Therefore, make sure that you follow these steps carefully. For added protection, back up the registry before you modify it. Then, you can restore the registry if a problem occurs. For more information about how to back up and restore the registry, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

322756  How to back up and restore the registry in Windows

To use the direct booking feature in Outlook 2010, you must add registry data to your Outlook client. Use the following steps to add this registry data to enable direct booking:

  1. Exit Outlook.
  2. Start Registry Editor.
    • In Windows Vista, click Start

the Start button

, type regedit in the Start Search box, and then press ENTER. 

User Account Control permission

 If you are prompted for an administrator password or for confirmation, type the password or provide confirmation.

    • In Windows XP, click Start, click Run, type regedit, and then click OK.
  1. Locate and then select the following subkey in the registry:

HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Office\14.0\Outlook\Options\Calendar

  1. On the Edit menu, point to New, and then click DWORD Value.
  2. Type EnableDirectBooking, and then press ENTER.
  3. Right-click EnableDirectBooking, and then click Modify.
  4. In the Value data box, type 1, and then click OK.
  5. Exit Registry Editor.
  6. Start Outlook.

 

Method 2: Configure the registry by using Group Policy

The registry data that is required to enable direct booking in Outlook can be configured by using Group Policy. The default Group Policy template (Outlk14.adm) for Outlook 2010 does not contain the policy setting that controls Outlook direct booking. Therefore, you must use a custom Group Policy template to enable direct booking by using Group Policy.

To deploy this setting by using a custom Group Policy template, follow these steps:

  1. The following file is available for download from the Microsoft Download Center:


Download

Download the Outlk14-DirectBooking.zip package now.

For more information about how to download Microsoft support files, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

119591  How to obtain Microsoft support files from online services

Microsoft scanned this file for viruses. Microsoft used the most current virus-detection software that was available on the date that the file was posted. The file is stored on security-enhanced servers that help prevent any unauthorized changes to the file.

  1. Extract the custom .adm template from the Outlk14-DirectBooking.zip package.

    Note The custom .adm template contains the following text.
  2. CLASS MACHINE
  3. CLASS USER
  4.  
  5.    CATEGORY !!L_MicrosoftOfficeOutlookDirectBooking
  6.          POLICY !!L_TurnOnOffDirectBooking
  7.              KEYNAME "Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\14.0\Outlook\Options\Calendar"
  8.              EXPLAIN !!L_TurnOnOffDirectBookingExplain
  9.              VALUENAME "EnableDirectBooking"
  10.              VALUEON NUMERIC 1
  11.              VALUEOFF NUMERIC 0
  12.          END POLICY
  13.       END CATEGORY
  14. [strings]
  15. L_Version="14.0.4760.1000"
  16. L_LCID="1033"
  17. L_MicrosoftOfficeOutlookDirectBooking="Outlook 2010 Direct Booking"
  18. L_TurnOnOffDirectBooking="Enable or disable direct booking"
  19. L_TurnOnOffDirectBookingExplain="This policy controls the Outlook direct booking feature in
    Outlook 2010 \n \n By default, Outlook 2010 does not implement the direct booking code
    used in earlier versions of Outlook, and a meeting request is sent to the resource
    mailbox the same way a meeting request is sent to regular meeting attendees.\n \n
    Enable this policy to configure Outlook to use the direct booking code whenever you add
    a mailbox to the Resources box in a meeting request.\n \n
    If you disable this policy or do not configure this policy, when you send a meeting
    request to a mailbox configured for direct booking, the meeting is not successfully
    booked. You do not receive an error message in this scenario. If you open the mailbox
    configured for direct booking, the meeting request is in the Inbox folder."
  20. Add the Outlk14-DirectBooking.adm file to your Group Policy Editor.

    Note The steps to add the .adm file to the Group Policy Editor vary, depending on the version of Windows that you are running. Also, because you may be applying the policy to an organizational unit (OU) and not to the whole domain, the steps may also vary in this aspect of applying a policy. Therefore, we recommend that you check your Windows documentation for more information.

    After you add the .adm template to the Group Policy Editor, go to step 4.
  21. In the Group Policy Editor, follow these steps:

a.            Expand User Configuration.

b.            Expand Policies.

c.            Expand Administrative Templates: Policy definitions.

d.            Expand Classic Administrative Templates (ADM) to locate the policy node for your custom template. The custom .adm template that you extracted in step 2 is in this location. The template is named "Outlook 2010 Direct Booking."

Collapse this image

Outlook 2010 Direct Booking



  1. Click Outlook 2010 Direct Booking.
  2. Under Settings, double-click Enable or disable direct booking.
  3. Click Enabled, and then click OK.

After you enable the policy, the policy setting will be applied to the Outlook client workstations when the Group Policy update is replicated. To test this change, run the following command at a command prompt on a client workstation:

gpupdate /force

After you run this command, start Registry Editor on the client workstation to make sure that the following registry data exists on the client:

Key: HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Policies\Microsoft\Office\14.0\Outlook\Options\Calendar
DWORDEnableDirectBooking
Value1

If you see this registry data in the registry, the Group Policy setting is applied to this client. Start Outlook to verify that this change resolves the problem.

 

Method 3: Deployment of the registry data by using the Office Customization Tool

You can also deploy the registry data by using the Add registry entries option in the Office Customization Tool (OCT). Follow these steps in the OCT to deploy registry data that re-enables the direct booking feature in Outlook 2010.

Note To use the OCT, you must have an Enterprise edition of Office 2010. If you have a Retail edition of Office 2010, you receive the following error message when you try to start the OCT:

Files necessary to run the Office Customization Tool were not found. Run Setup from the installation point of a qualifying product.

  1. Start the OCT by using a command similar to the following:

\\server_name\share_name\Office2010\Setup.exe /admin

  1. In the Select Product dialog box, click Create a new Setup customization file for the following product.
  2. In the Select Product dialog box, select your Office product. Then, click OK.
  3. In the navigation pane of the OCT, select Add registry entries, and then click Add.
  4. In the Add/Modify Registry Entry dialog box, specify the following settings, and then click OK:
    • RootHKEY_CURRENT_USER
    • Data typeREG_DWORD
    • KeySoftware\Microsoft\Office\14.0\Outlook\Options\Calendar
    • Value nameEnableDirectBooking
    • Value data1

The following figure displays these changes made in the Add/Modify Registry Entry dialog box:

Add/Modify Registry Entry dialog box



After you click OK in the Add/Modify Registry Entry dialog box, the OCT displays the registry data as shown in the following figure: 

Microsoft Office Customization Tool



  1. Complete any remaining tasks in the OCT, and then save the .msp file.
  2. Deploy Office 2010 by including this .msp file.

For more information about the Office Customization Tool in Office 2010, see the following topic on the Microsoft TechNet Web site:

Customization overview for Office 2010

 

Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Excel Formulas

Extract the first, middle and last name in Microsoft Excel

 

Enter the following name in cell A1: Peter Bendor Samuel 

 

Extract the first, middle and last name in Microsoft Excel

Use the following function to extract the first name:
=LEFT(A1,FIND(" ",A1)-1) 

The Result: Peter

 

Use the following function to extract the middle name:
=IF(ISERR(MID(A1,FIND(" ",A1)+1,IF(ISERR(FIND(" ",A1,FIND(" ",A1)+1)), FIND(" ",A1),FIND(" ",A1,FIND(" ",A1)+1))-FIND(" ",A1)-1)),"",MID(A1,FIND(" ",A1)+ 1,IF(ISERR(FIND(" ",A1,FIND(" ",A1)+1)),FIND(" ",A1),FIND(" ",A1,FIND(" ",A1)+1))-FIND(" ",A1)-1))

The Result: Bendor

 

Use the following function to extract the last name:
=RIGHT(A1,LEN(A1)-FIND("*",SUBSTITUTE(A1," ","*",LEN(A1)-LEN(SUBSTITUTE(A1," ",""))))) 

The Result: Samuel

 

Combine cells with first name and last name into email address?

 

if the names are in A1 and B1, use:

=A1 & "." & B1 & "@somewhere.com"

 

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

My World Book Edition II

My World Book Edition II – Default Username and Password is ‘admin’ and ‘admin’

Techies: Todays Headlines