Originally posted by: GeekDrew
Originally posted by: jfunk
Robor,
OK, I think your idea may work for me. If I just copy my current "user" profile to be the default, every user will get it created for them when they login to the machine to look just like that. I'm not concerned with them changing it on the local PC, because they are all locked down with Deep Freeze, so any changes to the C:\ drive are gone after a reboot, although that just made me think of another problem. This means that every time a person logs in, they're going to have to wait for a new profile to be created for them. Hell even if we didn't have deep freeze, the user has to wait for a new profile to be made each and every time they log into a new computer (kids don't sit at the same computer in the lab every time they go).
It seems rather strange to me that there is no standard way to do this. I don't know of any schools that have the same computers with the same software on them in every single room. Does Windows server really just assume that all PCs are identical through the entire organization? That seems like a major flaw to me. We can't afford to buy 1000 new PCs every year. The same user can get up from a 6 month old computer and walk down the hall and log into a 6 YEAR old computer. Obviously, they aren't going to have the same software installed on them. Is there no support at all for setups like this in Win Server? What I really want is just to completely shut off multiple profiles entirely. Do I obsolutely HAVE to have a unique desktop for every user? This seems really stupid. I can't think of any public school that would want this.
I've worked for two different school districts in the past few years - one network used only Windows, and another used NetWare & ZenWorks, integrated with Active Directory.
I'm of the rather strong opinion that NetWare, with ZenWorks, is the ideal solution for public education. The exact circumstance this thread is about is why some school districts use ZenWorks. Policies are centrally maintained, and Zen is able to dynamically assign which programs (icons) are available where - that is, on the desktop, in the Application Launcher, or on the Start Menu. Group Policy is also able to be centrally maintained, in much the same way Active Directory is, to lock down the desktops, rendering DeepFreeze effectively useless, IMHO. Group Policies + ZenImaging together is extremely powerful.
On the network that had only Windows, roaming profiles was disabled, and the machine created a new local profile the first time the user logged in. The default profile had been customized by the IT department (actually, it had on both networks), so that there was only the specified icons on the desktop, start menu, etc., and those icons were in the "All Users" directory.