This policy setting specifies how long Group Policy should wait for network availability notifications during startup policy processing. If the startup policy processing is synchronous, the computer is blocked until the network is available or the default wait time is reached. If the startup policy processing is asynchronous, the computer is not blocked and policy processing will occur in the background. In either case, configuring this policy setting overrides any system-computed wait times. If you enable this policy setting, Group Policy will use this administratively configured maximum wait time and override any default or system-computed wait time. If you disable or do not configure this policy setting, Group Policy will use the default wait time of 30 seconds on computers running Windows Vista operating system.
This policy setting specifies a set of parameters for controlling the Windows NTP Client. If you enable this policy setting, ...
This policy setting specifies additional programs or documents that Windows starts automatically when a user logs on to the ...
This policy setting specifies an alternate location for the Windows File Protection cache. If you enable this policy setting, ...
This policy setting specifies applications for which Windows Error Reporting should always report errors. To create a list ...
This policy setting specifies how long Group Policy should wait for network availability notifications during startup policy ...
This policy setting specifies how long Group Policy should wait for workplace connectivity notifications during startup policy ...
This policy setting specifies how often Group Policy for computers is updated while the computer is in use (in the background). ...
This policy setting specifies how often Group Policy for users is updated while the computer is in use (in the background). ...
This policy setting specifies how often Group Policy is updated on domain controllers while they are running (in the background). ...