same as the other email.. my apologies Brian Anderson Serapis Support Correctional Medical Service Office (314)919-9868 Pager (888)945-8643 Mobile (314)239-1398 banderson@xxxxxxxxxx http://www.serapisonline.com <http://www.serapisonline.com/> -----Original Message----- From: Brian Anderson Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2003 10:55 To: windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [windows2000] remotely get network settings on Win2k machines I've been tasked with getting some network settings off a sample of machines across a statewide WAN. The machines are all win2k, set up with static IP addresses in an NT4 domain. There's about 30 that I have to get. The main thing I'm looking for is what the default gateway setting is for each box (I already have the IP addresses). This is on a client's network, so I don't really have access to every resource. Is there a command line method that I might be able to do this? I can't think of anything other than ipconfig, but I can't seem to find any switches that would allow for remote polling. or am I out of luck and will have to call each one of these users and walk them thru it? -----Original Message----- From: Ibrahim, Mustafa [mailto:Mustafa.Ibrahim@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2003 10:19 To: 'windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [windows2000] Re: RES: Re: Re network boot disk Microsoft terminology sometimes sucks -----Original Message----- From: Sullivan, Glenn [mailto:GSullivan@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: 02 October 2003 14:11 To: 'windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [windows2000] Re: RES: Re: Re network boot disk No, there is no was that I know of. It is because of what Microsoft call's the Groveller service, which crawls through your RIS images looking for common files. It then removes the duplicates, and does an Exchange-like Single-Instance-Storage with the files. If you put the images on the same partition as your boot or system files, you OS would be grovelled as well. Not good... Just stick a 40 gig drive in a machine, put Windows on 10 gig, and make a separate partition for RIS with the rest... BTW, does anyone else think it is strange that your operating SYSTEM is in the BOOT partition, and you BOOT files are in the SYSTEM partition? Glenn Sullivan, MCSE+I MCDBA David Clark Company Inc. -----Original Message----- From: Eduardo Freitas [mailto:eduardofreitas@xxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2003 8:43 AM To: windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [windows2000] RES: Re: Re network boot disk Glenn, I read somewhere that the partition which has the images cannot be a system or boot partition. Is there any way around that? I don't have a machine lying around right now... Regards, Eduardo Herrmann de Freitas -----Mensagem original----- De: windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] Em nome de Sullivan, Glenn Enviada em: quarta-feira, 1 de outubro de 2003 15:50 Para: 'windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Assunto: [windows2000] Re: Re network boot disk How about Microsoft's Remote Installation Services? Free with your Win2K license... I use it to deploy Win2K all the time. And even WinXP in a pinch. Glenn Sullivan, MCSE+I MCDBA David Clark Company Inc. -----Original Message----- From: Rick Fogarty [mailto:rick@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 2:44 PM To: windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [windows2000] Re: Re network boot disk Thinking out loud here... I wonder if someone doesn't need the Altiris software could they still enable PXE on the clients and setup some type of PXE server? I know that's essentially what Altiris' Deployment solution is doing, but I wonder if someone actually has a free (low cost) PXE server out there somewhere. Anyone? -----Original Message----- From: windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:windows2000-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of Ibrahim, Mustafa Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 1:54 PM To: 'windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [windows2000] Re: Re network boot disk Brian, can you tell me where I can get tech info on this? -----Original Message----- From: Brian Lilley [mailto:Brian.Lilley@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] Sent: 01 October 2003 17:38 To: 'windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [windows2000] Re: Re network boot disk use Altiris here... and we don't need boot disks....just PXE boot enabled on Nics.... which is nice -----Original Message----- From: Ibrahim, Mustafa [mailto:Mustafa.Ibrahim@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: 01 October 2003 17:26 To: 'windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [windows2000] Re: Re network boot disk Nice, Thanks Brian and everyone else. Much appreciated -----Original Message----- From: Brian Anderson [mailto:BAnderson@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: 01 October 2003 16:50 To: windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Subject: [windows2000] Re: Re network boot disk do you actually have Ghost? We use Ghost 6.5 and there's a wizard that helps you make a multiboot floppy that reads about almost any nic you can imagine. And if there's something else you need, there's an option to insert the NDIS driver and let the wizard to take care of it for you. Makes it real easy -----Original Message----- From: Ibrahim, Mustafa [mailto:Mustafa.Ibrahim@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Wednesday, October 01, 2003 08:40 To: 'windows2000@xxxxxxxxxxxxx' Subject: [windows2000] Re network boot disk Hi all, Apologies if this is off topic. Is there a network boot disk maker out there. I need a utility that simplifies the process of creating network boot disks. I want to be able to create a single bootable CDROM that contains all the network drivers for all my desktop and laptop systems. Basically, I have all my ghost images are on a central imaging server. Currently, we have several different boot disks for each type of NIC in a given system. They don't all have the same NICs. I am trying to simplify this process, by creating a single bootable cdrom. Any ideas are welcome guys. Many thanks as always Mustafa _____________________________________________________________________ This message has been checked for all known viruses on behalf of Vivista by MessageLabs. http://www.messagelabs.com or Email: mailsweeper.info@xxxxxxxxxxxxx Vivista formerly Securicor Information Systems for further information http://www.vivista.co.uk ********************************************************************** The information contained in this e-mail message is intended only for the individuals named above. If you are not the intended recipient, you should be aware that any dissemination, distribution, forwarding or other duplication of this communication is strictly prohibited. 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