OK, back on track. Try deleteing that user's Windows Profile completely,
Let us know how that works
OK, back on track. Try deleteing that user's Windows Profile completely,
Let us know how that works
Officially Awesome
Real pirates wear silk suits & ties, and write EULAs
The only thing more dangerous to the liberty of a free people than big government, is big business.
I'm thinking this may be related to user rights and/or excessive UAC settings. Once the dialog has run typically it makes a a registry entry or drops a data file in the users Windows profile folder tree. If the user has insufficient rights, then the registry entry/data file isn't made (or is wiped out when the program closes) resulting in the indicated problem.
If you are going to fly by the seat of your pants, expect friction burns.
Windows XP is now over 10 years old, in software terms it makes Joan Collins look like the new kid on the block. - Statler
Everyone else being wrong is not the same thing as being right.