I've seen that error once before...make sure you got ALL the files (there are some hidden files on the disks). There was something else to check too. If I think of it, I'll post it.
Terminal Services comes with a component called "Client Connection Manager." It's the primary interface for setting up "connections" to different Terminal Servers.
It actually creates files that end with ".cns" that are simply descriptions of the connections.
CCM has import/export functionality, and that is what most people use to deploy connections using .cns files. However, I round that if I copied all the applications I wanted installed for a particular user to the setup disks/share, when I installed the Terminal Services Client, those connections automagically appeared.
Hadn't seen it documented anywhere else, but hadn't been looking either.
ANOTHER TIP: No matter how you deploy connections, be careful when you export if deploying to many users. If you create a connection, connect to the resource with a particular username (example: TESTER), then export the .cns for deployment, ALL users who import that .cns file will see that first username (TESTER) appear EVERY time in the "Username:" flied of the TS login when the making the connection. They can always clear it an type their own name, but brace for a deluge of helpdesk calls if such a deployment occurs.
