First published on TechNet on Jul 10, 2010
Ned here again with another ADMT post – this one’s a quickie. V2 profiles were introduced with Windows Vista to allow isolation between XP and newer operating systems. If you haven’t done so already, make sure to review Managing Roaming User Data Deployment Guide ; it was written by our very own Mike Stephens. If you have a mixture of V1 and V2 profiles and are planning an ADMT 3.2 migration, make sure you review this updated planning guide:
Ned here again with another ADMT post – this one’s a quickie. V2 profiles were introduced with Windows Vista to allow isolation between XP and newer operating systems. If you haven’t done so already, make sure to review Managing Roaming User Data Deployment Guide ; it was written by our very own Mike Stephens. If you have a mixture of V1 and V2 profiles and are planning an ADMT 3.2 migration, make sure you review this updated planning guide:
ADMT 3.2 and Managing Users, Groups, and User Profiles -
http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc974331(WS.10).aspx
This covers planning and deployment steps to make sure these profiles migrate correctly. I hope you find it useful.
Ned “that’s enough ADMT for awhile” Pyle
Updated Apr 04, 2019
Version 2.0NedPyle
Microsoft
Joined April 26, 2017
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