You need to join the exisiting NT Domain, so either have access rights to create the machine account or create one in advance. You loose the AD portion, but it still is a nice workstation. How do I set up the communication between the windows professional and the NT server and create an account where the user can only view exactly what I want them to only? Sorry I am new at this and I am still learning. If you're asking for technical help, please be sure to include all your system info, including operating system, model number, and any other specifics related to the problem.
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Please remember to be considerate of other members. All submitted content is subject to our Terms Of Use. The final comment in this thread makes the most sense to me for a plan:. My next step is getting Windows installation media. I haven't looked yet but, I think I may still have a copy of Workstation at home and, I'm not really sure what we've got running here.
Is there a way that I'm missing of identifying if we're running Server or Workstation? Here's the System Properties - which is of little to no help:. If anyone has any help on identifying this further or, has any additional help to provide on P2V for this, I'd love to hear from you.
Moderators, please feel free to relocate. How to determine the version of Windows that is being used. Exact Windows Version in Registry Key? Windows 3. Windows 9x was built on an architectural house of cards as the final version, Windows ME, proved beyond a doubt. That leaves Windows XP and Vista.
There's no reason really to pile on where Vista is concerned. Although on new hardware Vista's a half-decent operating system, everyone knows how it has turned out. When XP first shipped, it was slower than Windows Professional and more unstable. Windows Pro shipped February 17, It was a direct descendant of Windows NT Workstation 4. It overcame a lot of NT WS's limitations by having a wider hardware compatibility list. Its minimum hardware requirements of 64MB of RAM and a Mhz CPU were well below hardware that was being shipped at the time, so it ran really well on just about any machine you threw at it.
There was no heavy GUI sitting on top of it, so response times were almost always fast. Windows Pro isn't perfect of course. There was no built-in firewall, which made Windows Pro more vulnerable to some viruses and worms such as Code Red. Main features of Windows NT will be listed in the below. If you want to learn more, please focus on those Windows NT features. Probably you are not familiar with Windows NT, but it applies in our lives indeed.
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