Removal of workgroup/workstation, etc.

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Crosby_w0612

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I recently purchased a computer from a company going out of business. The

computer works great, except I want to "remove" the idea of it being a

workgroup/workstation computer. I do not want to have to log in each time.

Not to mention there is a group policy in place that effects auto-updates,

etc. I have Windows XP Professional. I currently have to log in as an

administrator, but my rights and privledges are still somewhat restricted by

the "Group Policy". How do I remove the "workgroup/workstation" and make my

computer a regular home computer? Can I just remove the administator or

would that keep me completely from using my computer? Please help.
 
When you login does the username/password box contain an entry for

Domain ? & is it pre-filled in with the company name you purchased it

from ? If so it is using cached credentials as if it were physically on the

corporate Domain network. If no Domain is shown you are using the

local administrator account unique to the PC.



To remove the computer from the domain you must ensure that the

local administrator account password is known. You'll need to log in

to that account and from System Properties, Computer Name (Tab)

click on the "To rename this computer or join a domain, Click Change."

Toggle the radio button from Member of Domain to Workgroup &

enter the workgroup name as either "Workgroup" or MSHome". A

reboot is required and you'll have to login with the local Administrator

account. Once logged in, you can create user accounts for day-to-day

use.



I would probably run the Registry Permissions reset tool you can find

here after leaving domain membership.

http://winonline.blogspot.com/2005/11/reset-entire-registry-permissions-to.html



This process must be done correctly or you'll loose any ability to log in

to the computer.



The local Administrator account is being used when no domain name is

shown or it is the name of the computer. ( Not the Company domain

name. ) The local administrator account is DIFFERENT from the same

Administrator account with the company Domain name.



If this is done incorrectly, you'll have to use a Password reset tool to

null out or remove the local Administrator password.





"Crosby_w0612" wrote in message

news:F78E55A3-ABE1-4A9D-A106-D67A8806D7FB@microsoft.com...

>I recently purchased a computer from a company going out of business. The

> computer works great, except I want to "remove" the idea of it being a

> workgroup/workstation computer. I do not want to have to log in each

> time.

> Not to mention there is a group policy in place that effects auto-updates,

> etc. I have Windows XP Professional. I currently have to log in as an

> administrator, but my rights and privledges are still somewhat restricted

> by

> the "Group Policy". How do I remove the "workgroup/workstation" and make

> my

> computer a regular home computer? Can I just remove the administator or

> would that keep me completely from using my computer? Please help.
 
Before leaving the Domain, I'd backup any account profiles that you

want to keep. After joining a Workgroup any Domain accounts will

be removed !



"R. McCarty" wrote in message

news:uP$eqqasKHA.4652@TK2MSFTNGP02.phx.gbl...

> When you login does the username/password box contain an entry for

> Domain ? & is it pre-filled in with the company name you purchased it

> from ? If so it is using cached credentials as if it were physically on

> the

> corporate Domain network. If no Domain is shown you are using the

> local administrator account unique to the PC.

>

> To remove the computer from the domain you must ensure that the

> local administrator account password is known. You'll need to log in

> to that account and from System Properties, Computer Name (Tab)

> click on the "To rename this computer or join a domain, Click Change."

> Toggle the radio button from Member of Domain to Workgroup &

> enter the workgroup name as either "Workgroup" or MSHome". A

> reboot is required and you'll have to login with the local Administrator

> account. Once logged in, you can create user accounts for day-to-day

> use.

>

> I would probably run the Registry Permissions reset tool you can find

> here after leaving domain membership.

> http://winonline.blogspot.com/2005/11/reset-entire-registry-permissions-to.html

>

> This process must be done correctly or you'll loose any ability to log in

> to the computer.

>

> The local Administrator account is being used when no domain name is

> shown or it is the name of the computer. ( Not the Company domain

> name. ) The local administrator account is DIFFERENT from the same

> Administrator account with the company Domain name.

>

> If this is done incorrectly, you'll have to use a Password reset tool to

> null out or remove the local Administrator password.

>

>

> "Crosby_w0612" wrote in message

> news:F78E55A3-ABE1-4A9D-A106-D67A8806D7FB@microsoft.com...

>>I recently purchased a computer from a company going out of business. The

>> computer works great, except I want to "remove" the idea of it being a

>> workgroup/workstation computer. I do not want to have to log in each

>> time.

>> Not to mention there is a group policy in place that effects

>> auto-updates,

>> etc. I have Windows XP Professional. I currently have to log in as an

>> administrator, but my rights and privledges are still somewhat restricted

>> by

>> the "Group Policy". How do I remove the "workgroup/workstation" and make

>> my

>> computer a regular home computer? Can I just remove the administator or

>> would that keep me completely from using my computer? Please help.


>

>
 
"Crosby_w0612" wrote in message

news:F78E55A3-ABE1-4A9D-A106-D67A8806D7FB@microsoft.com...

> I recently purchased a computer from a company going out of business. The

> computer works great, except I want to "remove" the idea of it being a

> workgroup/workstation computer. I do not want to have to log in each

> time.

> Not to mention there is a group policy in place that effects auto-updates,

> etc. I have Windows XP Professional. I currently have to log in as an

> administrator, but my rights and privledges are still somewhat restricted

> by

> the "Group Policy". How do I remove the "workgroup/workstation" and make

> my

> computer a regular home computer? Can I just remove the administator or

> would that keep me completely from using my computer? Please help.




As with all second-hand computers - do a COMPLETE re-format and

re-installation of your OS and applications.
 
In article ,

Crosby_w0612@discussions.microsoft.com says...

>

> I recently purchased a computer from a company going out of business. The

> computer works great, except I want to "remove" the idea of it being a

> workgroup/workstation computer. I do not want to have to log in each time.

> Not to mention there is a group policy in place that effects auto-updates,

> etc. I have Windows XP Professional. I currently have to log in as an

> administrator, but my rights and privledges are still somewhat restricted by

> the "Group Policy". How do I remove the "workgroup/workstation" and make my

> computer a regular home computer? Can I just remove the administator or

> would that keep me completely from using my computer? Please help.




If you don't wipe them and install the OS/Applications from scratch, on

a freshly formatted drive, you have no expectation of security or

privacy. The previous users could have anything, including keyloggers,

malware, etc.. .installed on them. Never, ever, trust a USED COMPUTER.



--

You can't trust your best friends, your five senses, only the little

voice inside you that most civilians don't even hear -- Listen to that.

Trust yourself.

spam999free@rrohio.com (remove 999 for proper email address)
 
Crosby_w0612 wrote:



> I recently purchased a computer from a company going out of business. The

> computer works great, except I want to "remove" the idea of it being a

> workgroup/workstation computer. I do not want to have to log in each time.

> Not to mention there is a group policy in place that effects auto-updates,

> etc. I have Windows XP Professional. I currently have to log in as an

> administrator, but my rights and privledges are still somewhat restricted by

> the "Group Policy". How do I remove the "workgroup/workstation" and make my

> computer a regular home computer? Can I just remove the administator or

> would that keep me completely from using my computer? Please help.




If the OS was actually included in the sale of the computer then its

installation media was also included. If you have no means of installing

the OS then what you got was only hardware which included a polluted hard

disk. If the computer came from a computer, it is unlikely that you got a

legitimate license for Windows. Their volume license cannot be split up and

sold off to other than the original organization to which that volume

license was sold. If they purchased separate licenses of Windows (not

likely since it would be far more expensive) then you need to get the

install discs for Windows (unless they are relying on a hidden partition to

restore a factory-time image). If they didn't include a manual with the

computer, you can get one by going to the computer maker's web site.



Whenever getting a used computer and unless you trust the seller to do a

*clean* install of the OS, you flatten and rebuild. You wipe all partitions

on the hard disk(s), decide what partitioning you want on those disks, and

then do a FRESH install of the operating system.
 
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