John,

Understand :-)

And yes, I found it OK and all is well.

Thanks !

Chuck

-----Original Message-----
From: pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:pctech-bounces@xxxxxxxxxxxx] On
Behalf Of John Taylor
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2003 4:08 PM
To: 'PC Technical Discussion for iSeries Users'
Subject: RE: [PcTech] Microsoft Outlook .PST file gone...


Chuck:

> ... I mean who would think
> searching the registry for every reference to this "gone" 
> user and replacing it with the new user, would do something 
> like this with now warning or something ? It also lost the 
> file locations settings in Word, Excel and Power Point.

The problem with your method is that most things in the registry which are
associated with a user profile are not referenced by the name of the
profile, but rather by a GUID value. In Windows, a user profile name is
simply a description. The name is associated with a security identifier
called a "SID". It is the SID which uniquely identifies the profile, and so
most registry entries are associated with the SID, not the name.

Changing all references of the name within the registry is something akin to
running Al Barsa's MAKEAMESS command. Hacking the registry is always done at
your own risk, as you're bypassing all the "safe" interfaces, so backing it
up first is an important step. 

However, that doesn't mean that you're S.O.L yet. Just mucking with the
registry will NOT delete the user's documents. Unless you've deleted the
profile, your user's document folder should still be on the drive, and the
.pst file safely stored within it.


Regards,

John Taylor



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