Restores the definitions of the %HOMESHARE% and %HOMEPATH% environment variables to those used in Windows NT 4.0 and earlier. If you enable this setting, the system uses the Windows NT 4.0 definitions. If you disable this setting or do not configure it, the system uses the new definitions designed for the Windows 2000 operating system. Along with %HOMEDRIVE%, these variables define the home directory of a user profile. The home directory is a persistent mapping of a drive letter on the local computer to a local or remote directory. By default, in Windows 2000 Server Family, %HOMESHARE% stores the fully qualified path to the home directory (such as \\server\share\dir1\dir2\homedir). Users can access the home directory and any of its subdirectories from the home drive letter, but they cannot see or access its parent directories. %HOMEPATH% stores a final backslash and is included for compatibility with earlier systems. On Windows NT 4.0 and earlier, %HOMESHARE% stores only the network share (such as \\server\share). %HOMEPATH% stores the remainder of the fully qualified path to the home directory (such as \dir1\dir2\homedir). As a result, users can access any directory on the home share by using the home directory drive letter. Tip: To specify a home directory in Windows 2000 Server Family, in Active Directory Users and Computers or Local Users and Groups, right-click the name of a user account, click Properties, click the Profile tab, and in the "Home folder" section, select the "Connect" option and select a drive letter and home directory. Example: Drive Z is mapped to \\server\share\dir1\dir2\homedir. If this setting is disabled or not configured (Windows 2000 Server Family behavior): -- %HOMEDRIVE% = Z: (mapped to \\server\share\dir1\dir2\homedir) -- %HOMESHARE% = \\server\share\dir1\dir2\homedir -- %HOMEPATH% = \ If the setting is enabled (Windows NT 4.0 behavior): -- %HOMEDRIVE% = Z: (mapped to \\server\share) -- %HOMESHARE% = \\server\share -- %HOMEPATH% = \dir1\dir2\homedir
Restore of the file %s failed because of a problem reading from the ZIP file on the backup media (UNZIP returned dunzip error ...
Restore the GPO named "{0}" in the {1} domain from its most recent backup found at the following location: {2}. (Restore-GPO) ...
Restore the GPO with ID {0} in the {1} domain from its most recent backup found at the following location: {2}. (Restore-GPO) ...
Restore your system to an earlier time without affecting your files, or replace everything on your computer and reinstall ...
Restores the definitions of the %HOMESHARE% and %HOMEPATH% environment variables to those used in Windows NT 4.0 and earlier. ...
Restoring a metabase backup is a lengthy procedure that deletes all your current settings and causes all Internet services ...
Restoring Active Directory Domain Services (AD DS) from infrequent backups can result in the loss of Active Directory data ...
Restoring default settings will remove all Windows Firewall settings that you have configured for all network locations. ...
Restoring system files from a system image backup will require you to connect the disk containing your backup to the computer. ...