Engineer, Lab Manger & Production Manager at Microsoft based in Redmond. Technical resource in release management for Microsoft Buisness Online Services. Currently working on all feature sets of Configuration Manager 2007 with focus on Network Access Protection, Virtualization and Internet Based Client Management. Previously worked for Warner Bros, NBC Studios, AT&T, 24 Hrs Fitness, State of California, Northrope Grumman, NOS Communications, GE Capital, KLA Tencor, Wells Fargo Mortagage, Dudeworks, TeleTech, TekSystems, etc...
March 2009 - Posts
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I was chilling at home building a new computer with my RTM version of Vista. Joined it to my home domain. I tried accessing Live.com. first thinking live.com was down. Later I started wondering about my Comcast connection. Then I start doubting my router. So I thought for I while trying to figure out what was wrong. Only then did I decide to pay attention to the little orange shield in the task bar. I remember glazing over it earlier, but I disregarded it as an indicator of the firewall for some reason. Once I investigated the orange shield. I found myself in quarantine. I forgot about NAP was enabled on my home network… Click on the screen shot below. . . Gotta love it … 
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1. go into the VMM database to the table tbl_WLC_VObject, and change the ObjectState field of the problem VM, which probably has the value 104, to value 1 ** At this point, i went direct to the table and edit the value manually. Of course I did this because this I a Lab environment.
update dbo.tbl_WLC_VObject set ObjectState = 1 where Name = '<VM name>' 2. in VMM admin console, you're VM will now have the status missing, now just delete the VM and it's gone. Answer found here on : --> http://social.technet.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/virtualmachinemanager/thread/872034ba-3545-4431-b9f6-07ee8c65188b
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