Tech Support > Microsoft Windows > Security & Administration > user profile change
user profile change
Posted by Tom Doggett on June 19th, 2008


I've got XP Pro. I've got a profile which logs me into my company's domain. I
have my username, password and the domain name. When i take my computer home
(laptop) I still use the same username, password and domain name to run my
computer. All of my documents are there. Email works, etc. Now, I know I'm
not actually logged in to the domain when I'm at home, but I can still use
this profile and everything looks the same, except I can't access the office
servers and intranet stuff (expected). Anyway, here is my problem... I don't
work for this company anymore and want to change the profile to not log in to
the domain, or at least try to, without losing all my other information. I'd
like to change the username and change the "join domain" options. When i did
this, it lost all my "my documents" stuff. I was able to do a restore back to
a previous date and it all recovered. Is there a way I can log in using this
profile and tell it i no longer want to join this domain? Can I log in using
my administrator log-in on the local machine and change the other profile?
Sorry for the very lengthy description. I appreciate any help.

Posted by Lanwench [MVP - Exchange] on June 21st, 2008


Tom Doggett <TomDoggett@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
Yep - you're using "cached credentials".

What you can *try* is:

Create a new local user account on the PC
Log in once as that user & log out
Log back into the local computer as an administrator (not your domain
account, nor the new user account)
Go to control panel, system, advanced....in User Profiles, click the
Settings button
Select your domain profile, click on Copy To, and browse to the new local
user's c:\documents and settings\username folder.
Click OK.
Click the Change button in "Permitted to use" and use Everyone
Close out.

Log in as the local user and make sure the settings look right. If so, you
should be good to go...disjoin the computer from the domain, making sure you
know the local admin credentials





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