By disconnecting yourself from your work domain you destroyed the trust
relationship that existed. You now need to ask your network administrator
for the password that goes with the local Administrator account.
Pegasus [MVP] wrote:
> By disconnecting yourself from your work domain you destroyed the
> trust relationship that existed. You now need to ask your network
> administrator for the password that goes with the local
> Administrator account.
maxatv wrote:
> Thats what I thought, after I get the admin password should i go
> back into the control panel/system/computer name and change it back
> or will i have to re-enter everything?
A computer does not have to be a member of a workgroup to access most (all
normal) workgroup resources (shares, printers, etc.) You simply need a
valid user account and use that when you try to connect via IP/etc to
whatever resource you attempt to use.
Pretty much the same for most domains - although further limitation is
possible - it is not widely used.
By removing the computer from the domain - you have lost the domain trust
and likely access to all accountsthat allowed you to utilize that machine.
While Pegasus advice is correct - I will be surprised if the network (domain
actually) administrator will give you the local administrator password.
They may even remove you from the local administrators group for the
future - so this cannot happen again.
You will have to likely be connected to your work network to rejoin it.
--
Shenan Stanley
MS-MVP
--
How To Ask Questions The Smart Way
http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html
maxatv wrote:
> ok so after i do that can i just go to control panel and change
> setting back or does the guy who setup the network have to re-enter
> everything
You will likely have to be connected to the physical network at work to get
to the actual domain to rejoin said laptop and it is unlikely the domain
administrator is about to give you the local administrator account password
for the laptop anyway. ;-) Although - they gave you administrative rights
originally - so...
And your user account doesn't likely have the rights you would need to
overwrite the account information already in the domain even if you were
connected to the physical work network and attempted to rejoin it.
By changing the computer from the domain to a workgroup, you
destroyed the trust relationship between the domain and the machine. In
doing so, you've also rendered your domain login credentials as invalid.
You'll need to be physically connected to the domain network, you'll
need to have administrative privileges to the workstation, and you'll
need to have sufficient privileges on the domain. Then you can add the
machine back on to the domain, after having first deleted the computer's
old domain account (unless you've also renamed the computer).
Take the computer to your company's IT department for repairs. I do
hope that your employer is of the understanding and forgiving variety.
In many companies, if the computer is company property, your employment
could be summarily terminated for your attempting to alter its
configuration in this way, and thereby rendering useless, company property.
This isn't entirely your fault, though. A lot of responsibility
rests squarely upon the shoulders of the network administrator. You
see, if the computer had been properly configured, your account would
not have had sufficient privileges to remove the computer from the
domain in the first place. Clearly, you lack the requisite knowledge to
be properly entitled to full administrative privileges on the computer,
or you would have known better than to do what you did. You would also
have known that removing the computer from the domain and joining your
workgroup would not be necessary in order for you to connect the laptop
to your home network.
--
Bruce Chambers
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happykaka