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Unable to Install Applications- Windows Installer XP Problems
... mark-al...@com.mcnet.ch "Gerald Scale" <geraldsc...@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:154f01c024aa$7eb84660$1e83300a@cpmsftngxa03... I am getting the error "The Application failed to initialize properly (0xc00000ba) whenever I attempt to install applications developed in VB6 and deployed by the Setup Kit.

Update ports!?
Hello: Sometime this week computer began to run very slow and when I tried to install an application it would not complete the install or I can't print anything (with my printer) as well. I can pull-up other programs and they seem okay to run. I had to use Windows Task Manager to close any thing that "stalled out".

Install Applications
While we have implicit faith in the Absolute and Inviolate security of the operating system itself, we have discovered that it is possible to use the system to install *applications* and that many stupid people actually attempt to do this. Every application that we have examined entails certain security risks which

building installation scripts
I would like to temporarily give a user the right to install an application. I thought I read somewhere that there is a feature called "run as", which would perhaps accomplish this task, but I do not know how to activate it, or how to get my user to use it from his workstation. You can activate this by holding down

installing applications prior to installing Terminal Services
Pitc...@td.com comp windows x apps -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 jon wrote: hi. suddenly i am having trouble installing or even updating certain applications, most notably Yahoo! Messenger and ZoneAlarm. IIRC, these are MSWindows programs. If so, then you've got the wrong group.

Install application in SharePoint Services 3
I have several group: "Applications to Install" and "Applications to Run" (and a few more groups as well) and the list is starting to look like this: Application A Install Application A Application B Install Application B Install Application C Install Application D Install Application E Application C Application D

Can Users (ie non Power Users) install applications?
First, is the correct place to install new programs and applications from a tarball in usr/local? IF, a big IF you are going to install from tarballs, go with the flow. Just do what the README tells you I was doing it in my home directory but decided I did not like that. I want to keep everything organized.

How install VB6 applications on server ?
Steve Knight ste...@knight-toolworks.com alt comp sys palmtops pilot On Thu, 07 Nov 2002 17:28:41 -0500, Pierre Bellavance <NOSPAMbellava...@REMOVEvideotron.ca> wrote: Is it possible to install memory hungry applications such as Epocrates and Beiks dictionaries on my Palm's SD card? in the file install window in

Install Applications
To be compatible with Windows 2000 and Windows XP, Administrators and Power Users should be able to install your application system-wide for all of the user groups Users cannot install applications that can be run by other Users. Users cannot run applications installed by other Users. Users cannot access other

Application install under XP
Jan Pluntke ul...@gmx.de alt comp periphs cdr On Tue, 08 Feb 2000 00:05:17 GMT, rrol...@my-deja.com wrote: I have a 300Mbyte application to install and would like to install/move it directly to a cdrw/cdr. The application install.exe will not let me select the cdrw drive letter because it is not a hard drive.

Installing applications from a network share on TSE 2003
We want to increase the applications that can be run on these machines but cannot agree on how to do it. I reckon we have to install all the progs on one station and then replicate in some way to all the others. The network manager wants to keep all the applications on the file servers. How do other schools do this

Cannot install applications "Unable to access setup log"
Camille Schulz wrote: I am trying to deploy applications to our users; however, for our WinNT users who are not administators, they can not install software, even via Nal. If I run it as an "unsecured user" I cannot deploy it by user (errors result, per CoolSolutions). This will be an option for us in the future,

How to install applications from limited user account ...
Without admin authentication users can install to /Applications and whack preferences in the system libray that could be inherited by other users of that And likewise, if you install applications at a user level then those computers can't (unless they were written with malicious intent to exploit known security

Wants Outlook 2000 Install
All normal users on the network are unable to install applications on an NT 4.0 Workstation, only users with admin rights are able to do this. However, when the apps are installed, the original user is unable to run the applications (as they do not appear on the start menu). Basically at the end of the day,

application install
Even
if you are an Administrator initiating the Startcli.exe, as soon as Startcli.exe determines there's nothing to install, it aborts immediately regardless. So, do all users need to be able to install applications? Actually, no. What that means is that if you don't want to install applications,

Application Install after Clean Reinstall of 98FE
Many applications require administrator rights to install, so we do. However regular user can't run some programms. Once the application does not execute, once an error message (no enough priviledges), and so on. Do I have to change the user.dat or make any changes to the HKLM? If so, what exactly do I have to do?

Installing Applications
Copy present install to new drive. Swap drives. Blank older drive. Un-install and re-install applications to old drive. I run a dual boot Win98SE and XP pro system. I install all my programs to a Myprogs folder on a D partition on my main drive(your 2nd older drive after the swap). I have my XP on my older 2nd

Linux has a long way to go before it becomes the major OS
Is it possible to restrict a users ability to install applications on a given workstation on a NT 4.0 Network. -- Check out the new Directory on the web at http://www.quirki.com -- Well, yes and no. You can, using the System Policy Editor, restrict users to running only specified applications, by listing their

installing applications
Thomas A. Rowe tar...@mvps.org microsoft public frontpage client Here is how I keep all of my MS applications running smoothly: I always install If I have to re-install a application, then after re-installing I re-install any other applications/service packs/releases that I had originally install after the

NT users cannot install Applications
A
major problem is the lack of quality fonts, and each application needing it's own fonts. With a default installation of Mandrake the KDE desktop and Blame all those application developers that makes only Windows versions of their products. And claiming that it easier to install applications on Windows I would