Roaming file vista




















Sign up for the Confident Computing newsletter for weekly solutions to make your life easier. Click here and get The Ask Leo! Become a Patron of Ask Leo! AppData is a folder in your Windows user account home folder, and Roaming is a folder within that.

The folder is normally hidden, and lives within your user account home folder. As an example, on one of my machines the full path would be:. In theory, then, you could log in to any machine connected to your corporate network on which you have permission with your single corporate Windows account. However the folder most certainly is. Now, you indicated that you tried to look at the application data folder and you received an Access Denied message.

When they made the transition from Windows XP to Windows Vista, they actually rearranged some of the places where data is stored. Subscribe to Confident Computing! Less frustration and more confidence, solutions, answers, and tips in your inbox every week. Using no more than three syllables in any given word? With way to much time on my hands, I too meddled way deep inside my XP. The more you see, the more confounded you become.

It was Norton Ghost — used for the back-up and restore utility……which I needed after discovering many more files I thought must be deleted. Or at best it will mess things up pretty badly. How do you access files saved in this folder? Specifically, this location comes up first when my accounting software creates a report after posting then running the lockbox file I uploaded into the software.

When I do a search for a file with the name, the computer shows no files with that name. Leo, my AppData is now become No, you cannot just delete whatever. Many programs store important data there.

The computer that these folders are saved on is now strictly an Internet browser-use only computer, and I do not want to reformat. I am entering hyperlinks in a large and important Excel file on an external hard drive x: that link to a variety of resources, including elsewhere in that Excel file, elsewhere on that x: drive, or online. The destination file name is still correct, but as it is not present via this path, the link is useless — it no longer points to anything.

I use my external drive x: as my main data store, and another external drive as data backup , and I only copy what I need to c:. The benefit is portability — I can plug up to any other computer — security easier to store and hide an external drive than a laptop — continued access to data in case of motherboard or other computer malfunction — and upgrade-friendly — when I change my laptop.

No doubt this goes against the way Microsoft wants me to use hardware, and depending on your advice, I may have to think again. However, the discovery that hyperlinks can be alterered by Windows is alarming. So what are the fixes? Is this inevitable any time I plug the external drive to any other computer? Or does it only arise if there happens to be an autosave while x: is plugged up elsewhere? Office Office Exchange Server.

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Each article deals with a theme in depth with numerous illustrated examples, tutorials, fact sheets and even a DIY section. Friday, January 14, Big Photography. Home Guides. Can I delete AppData local temp files Windows 10? November 14, Reading Time: 8 mins read. Share on Facebook Share on Twitter. Windows Temp Folders You can safely remove anything in the folder, but you may not be able to delete items that are in use. With PowerShell, we can directly UE-V is an elegant solution One of the reasons a user may experience a slow logon are problems with a large roaming user profile UserProfilesView is a free portable and scriptable tool that enables you to view all local and roaming user profiles He has more than Thank you for the info.

Interesting and helpful. Especially that section about Supermandatory profiles. There are also some rumors on troubles with loading profiles on MS TechNet forums here and there. By the way, I've heard, there are utilities that can change the profiles right on the client without roaming them with some propriatory tricks. Rumors say Scriptlogic's Desktop Authority www. You are correct.

Desktop Authority is the product that you are referring to and one of the pain points that the product is designed to address is the desire to eliminate the need for roaming profiles. Using a combination of features, including Folder Redirection, Desktop Authority is able to achieve this task.

However, the wording "cope with profile corruption" is inaccurate. Having to cope with something would imply that you are still living with it, but are able to get by a little easier. Desktop Authority will allow you to eliminate the need to use the Roaming Profiles at all. I found here that all you have to do is add ". Uver easy now that I know, lol!!! Ok, I have a different scenario I work in a company with a win2k server still operational and several winxp computers Recently we acquired a few laptops with vista It seems to me the problem solution's posted on this article are based on a the use of a windows server.

V2 at the end just like Michael's article says. Am I missing a policy or setting somewhere? Would you know of a way to redirect the bulk of Application Data and Local Settings to a location on the hard drive?

However, some apps choose to install ton of files into these 2 folders in the user profile. The resulting profile size is around MB. We need a way to redirect these common files to the local drive, but keep the roaming. Sounds easy except that the install for the apps have no options to change the target location of installation.

The only way to "fool" is to edit hundreds of file locations to All Users, then copy those folders over to the All Users profile on the local drive. If the login session could hit a policy, or. I do the same beetwen Windows XP desktop and a Windows terminal server redirecting "Desktop" and "Documents" folders on the terminal used for data access from the company's outside , but I do not use roaming profiles, I use folders redirection on both Windows XP and terminal.

I use also a script to "syncronize" favourites folder because in Windows it's possible to redirect favourites but it isn't in Windows XP. I do the same also with the Outlook signature, but in that case I have a logoff script and a logon script to "syncronize" the signature.

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