Wednesday, July 12, 2017

What to do if the HomePlug has been reset (CURB)

    NOTES

    The HomePlug device is a TP-Link AV500 Nano Powerline Adapter (TL-PA4010).
    These instructions were written for a TP-Link AV500 Nano Powerline Adapter (TL-PA4010) configured through the TP-Link Powerline Communication (PLC) Utility version 2.2.2660.4.

    IMPORTANT Secure Powerline Network name MUST match Basic setting device name. Once this is done, the Home LED will light up.

    If the HomePlug has been reset:

    1. Download and install the HomePlug utility at: http://www.tp-link.com/en/download/TL-PA4010.html#Utility
      NOTE There will be different links for different operating systems.
    2. Plug the HomePlug into the designated power outlet.
    3. Connect the RJ45 connector of the HomePlug to the local area network (LAN) using an ethernet cable.
    4. Open the HomePlug utility.
    5. In the left pane, click Secure.
    1. On the Secure Powerline Network screen,
      1. For Enter a new powerline network name, enter: CurbPowerHub 
      2. Click Save
    1. In the right pane, hover over the HomePlug device for the side options to become available.
    2. Choose Basic (the single gear icon)
    1. In the left pane, click on Rename.
    2. For Enter a new device name, enter: CurbPowerHub
       

    NOTES
    (1) It is possible that for a few early versions, the device name could be: CurbPower Hub, but most will be CurbPowerHub(2) The values are case sensitive.

Thursday, January 5, 2017

We couldn't get your latest saved data

Issue

We couldn't get your latest saved data

Cause

Unknown

Root Cause

Unknown

Scope

Microsoft Xbox

Workaround
  1. Scroll left on the Home screen to open the guide.
  2. Select Settings.
  3. Select All Settings.
  4. Select Network.
  5. Select Network settings
  6. Select Go offline.
  7. Scroll left on the Home screen to open the guide.
  8. Select Settings.
  9. Select Restart console.
  10. Select Yes to confirm.
  11. Sign out of any profiles (if instant sign-in is on)
  12. Scroll left on the Home screen to open the guide.
  13. Select Settings.
  14. Select All Settings.
  15. Select Network.
  16. Select Network settings
  17. Select Go online.
  18. Open a game and let it request and complete the profile login
Resolution

None

Reference

Xbox couldn't get your latest saved date?
http://www.xboxoneforums.net/forum/5-xbox-one-chat/10836-xbox-couldn-t-get-your-latest-saved-date.html#post81352

More Information

Some online forums suggest that this is caused by corruption after an update is installed.


Thursday, November 3, 2016

Nest Cam Outdoor video is stuck loading with a spinning circle.

Issue

Nest Cam Outdoor video is stuck loading with a spinning circle.

Cause

Network ports required to stream video from Nest to the playback device are not open on the firewall.

Root Cause

Unknown

Scope

Nest Cam Outdoor

Workaround

None

Resolution

Open network ports on the firewall that are required to stream video from Nest to the playback device.

More Information

Method
Firewall Port Requirement
Web Browser (home.nest.com)
Any Source IP, Any Source Port to AWS, 1935/tcp
Android App (Nest)
Any Source IP, Any Source Port to AWS, 1443/tcp
AWS = Amazon Web Service

Saturday, August 16, 2014

Adobe ARM - Time elapsed is less than time limit - returning 0

Issue


The AdobeARM.log file contains similar entries:

[YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS] IsTimeElapsed...
[YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS] Minutes elapsed: MMM
[YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS] Time elapsed is less than time limit - returning 0

Cause


By default, the Updater performs an update check every 3 days. The Updater adds the update check interval (3 days) to the value of tLasT_Acrobat. If the current date/time is less than this value, the Updater will exit without checking for updates and log the message.

Solution


Removing the tLastT_Acrobat entry will allow the Updater to perform the check.

Run the following via a Command Prompt.

REG DELETE "HKEY_USERS\.DEFAULT\Software\Adobe\Adobe ARM\1.0\ARM" /V "tLastT_Acrobat" /F

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

UAC, Administrators and Logon Scripts...

Logon script implementations prior to User Account Control (UAC) were fairly simple. Apply a logon script to user and the script did what it was supposed to. Post-UAC is a much different experience. There are things to take into account that, hopefully, this post will help explain.

Logon scripts can be applied to user accounts using
  • The Active Directory Logon script defined in the user account properties
    NOTE: Only one can be specified. Therefore, it would need to call others.
  •  A GPO Logon script

When a user is not part of the local Administrators group, scripts execute under the standard user access token. But when the user is part of the local Administrators group, scripts execute differently.

In the following scenarios, two logon scripts were applied at each login. Either both batch (CMD) or both VBScript (VBS).

Red = Bad, Yellow = OK, Green = Good

In conclusion, we found that using the Active Directory Logon script defined in the user account properties in conjunction with a VBScript file provided the most reliable results. This provided accurate drive mappings for the standard user account and no drive mapping for the administrative user account (or elevation). Conversely, the use of a batch file did allow accurate drive mappings for the standard user account, it also provided unavailable drive mappings to the administrative user account.

NOTE: This post does not apply to mapping drives using Group Policy Preferences.

Monday, May 26, 2014

Oracle Java Deployment Rule Set still broken

When Oracle began building in stronger security measures in their Java products in December 2012 with version 7 Update 10, IT departments discovered that the product could no longer work correctly. End users found that the product could no longer access Java applets or applications without error messages being presented. Enterprises found that the additional security did not include measures to bypass it, even for their own internally owned sites.

In September of 2013, Oracle released Deployment Rule Set (DRS) with Java 7 Update 40. DRS introduced the use of an XML file that allowed for defining a site and whether it was allowed to run. An extension to allowing the site to run, the XML could also define which version of Java to run the site with.

These versions do not support the feature to use a specific version of Java for a specified site.

Java 7 ReleasesRelease Date
Java 7 Update 60 Limited UpdateMay 28, 2014
Java 7 Update 55 CPUApril 15, 2014
Java 7 Update 51 CPUJanuary 14, 2014
Java 7 Update 45 CPUOctober 15, 2013
Java 7 Update 40 Limited UpdateSeptember 10, 2013

If you've been stressing-out attempting to get this functionality working, waiting until a version that works is released would alleviate that stress.

REFERENCE

Deployment Rule Set
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/technotes/guides/jweb/security/deployment_rules.html

Monday, May 12, 2014

The cache disk on a Citrix PVS target fills and a server that is attached to it crashes.

Symptoms

Above normal CPU utilitization by the DAgentUI.exe process(es).
The per-user log, DAgentUI{USERNAME}{PID}.log, contains the following entries, repeatedly:

[MM/DD/YYYY hh:mm:s.ms TID #] DAgentProxy.cpp:518 CDAgentProxy::WaitForDAgentService() Waiting 15000 ms for DAgent service
[MM/DD/YYYY hh:mm:s.ms TID #] DAgentProxy.cpp:546 CDAgentProxy::WaitForDAgentService() Wait returned - -1
[MM/DD/YYYY hh:mm:s.ms TID #] DAgentProxy.cpp:362 CDAgentProxy::WaitForDAgentData() entered
[MM/DD/YYYY hh:mm:s.ms TID #] HideTrayIconThread.cpp:37 CHideTrayIconThread::HideClientTrayIcon() entered
[MM/DD/YYYY hh:mm:s.ms TID #] HideTrayIconThread.cpp:51 Destroying tray icon

Cause

The Altiris Deployment Agent service is not running or has been disabled. This causes the per-user log to fill with events and subsequently fill the cache disk. 

Solution

If the service MUST be disabled, delete the DAgentUI registry value in the registry that starts the per-user process (DAgentUI.exe).

Otherwise, start the Altiris Deployment Agent service.