Tag: Computer Configuration
Send data when on connected to a restricted/costed network
This policy setting determines whether Windows Error Reporting (WER) checks for a network cost policy that restricts the amount of data that is sent over the network. If you enable this policy setting WER does not check for network cost policy restrictions and transmits data even if network cost is restricted. If you disable or do not configure this policy setting WER does not send data but will check the network cost policy again if the network profile is changed.
Send additional data when on battery power
This policy setting determines whether Windows Error Reporting (WER) checks if the computer is running on battery power. By default when a computer is running on battery power WER only checks for solutions but does not upload additional report data until the computer is connected to a more permanent power source. If you enable this policy setting WER does not determine whether the computer is running on battery power but checks for solutions and uploads report data normally. If you disable or do not configure this policy setting WER checks for solutions while a computer is running on battery power but does not upload report data until the computer is connected to a more permanent power source.
Disable logging
This policy setting controls whether Windows Error Reporting saves its own events and error messages to the system event log. If you enable this policy setting Windows Error Reporting events are not recorded in the system event log. If you disable or do not configure this policy setting Windows Error Reporting events and errors are logged to the system event log as with other Windows-based programs.
Prevent display of the user interface for critical errors
This policy setting prevents the display of the user interface for critical errors. If you enable this policy setting Windows Error Reporting does not display any GUI-based error messages or dialog boxes for critical errors. If you disable or do not configure this policy setting Windows Error Reporting displays the user interface for critical errors.
Disable Windows Error Reporting
This policy setting turns off Windows Error Reporting so that reports are not collected or sent to either Microsoft or internal servers within your organization when software unexpectedly stops working or fails. If you enable this policy setting Windows Error Reporting does not send any problem information to Microsoft. Additionally solution information is not available in the Action Center in Control Panel. If you disable or do not configure this policy setting the Turn off Windows Error Reporting policy setting in Computer Configuration/Administrative Templates/System/Internet Communication Management/Internet Communication settings takes precedence. If Turn off Windows Error Reporting is also either disabled or not configured user settings in Control Panel for Windows Error Reporting are applied.
Display Error Notification
This policy setting controls whether users are shown an error dialog box that lets them report an error. If you enable this policy setting users are notified in a dialog box that an error has occurred and can display more details about the error. If the Configure Error Reporting policy setting is also enabled the user can also report the error. If you disable this policy setting users are not notified that errors have occurred. If the Configure Error Reporting policy setting is also enabled errors are reported but users receive no notification. Disabling this policy setting is useful for servers that do not have interactive users. If you do not configure this policy setting users can change this setting in Control Panel which is set to enable notification by default on computers that are running Windows XP Personal Edition and Windows XP Professional Edition and disable notification by default on computers that are running Windows Server. See also the Configure Error Reporting policy setting.
Configure Error Reporting
This policy setting configures how errors are reported to Microsoft and what information is sent when Windows Error Reporting is enabled. This policy setting does not enable or disable Windows Error Reporting. To turn Windows Error Reporting on or off see the Turn off Windows Error Reporting policy setting in Computer Configuration/Administrative Templates/System/Internet Communication Management/Internet Communication settings. Important: If the Turn off Windows Error Reporting policy setting is not configured then Control Panel settings for Windows Error Reporting override this policy setting. If you enable this policy setting the setting overrides any user changes made to Windows Error Reporting settings in Control Panel and default values are applied for any Windows Error Reporting policy settings that are not configured (even if users have changed settings by using Control Panel). If you enable this policy setting you can configure the following settings in the policy setting:- “”Do not display links to any Microsoft ‘More information’ websites””: Select this option if you do not want error dialog boxes to display links to Microsoft websites. – “”Do not collect additional files””: Select this option if you do not want additional files to be collected and included in error reports. – “”Do not collect additional computer data””: Select this if you do not want additional information about the computer to be collected and included in error reports. – “”Force queue mode for application errors””: Select this option if you do not want users to report errors. When this option is selected errors are stored in a queue directory and the next administrator to log on to the computer can send the error reports to Microsoft. – “”Corporate file path””: Type a UNC path to enable Corporate Error Reporting. All errors are stored at the specified location instead of being sent directly to Microsoft and the next administrator to log onto the computer can send the error reports to Microsoft. – “”Replace instances of the word ‘Microsoft’ with””: You can specify text with which to customize your error report dialog boxes. The word “”Microsoft”” is replaced with the specified text. If you do not configure this policy setting users can change Windows Error Reporting settings in Control Panel. By default these settings are Enable Reporting on computers that are running Windows XP and Report to Queue on computers that are running Windows Server 2003. If you disable this policy setting configuration settings in the policy setting are left blank. See related policy settings Display Error Notification (same folder as this policy setting) and Turn off Windows Error Reporting in Computer Configuration/Administrative Templates/System/Internet Communication Management/Internet Communication settings.
Configure list of Enhanced Storage devices usable on your computer
This policy setting allows you to configure a list of Enhanced Storage devices by manufacturer and product ID that are usable on your computer. If you enable this policy setting only Enhanced Storage devices that contain a manufacturer and product ID specified in this policy are usable on your computer. If you disable or do not configure this policy setting all Enhanced Storage devices are usable on your computer.
Configure list of IEEE 1667 silos usable on your computer
This policy setting allows you to create a list of IEEE 1667 silos compliant with the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. (IEEE) 1667 specification that are usable on your computer. If you enable this policy setting only IEEE 1667 silos that match a silo type identifier specified in this policy are usable on your computer. If you disable or do not configure this policy setting all IEEE 1667 silos on Enhanced Storage devices are usable on your computer.
Do not throttle additional data
This policy setting determines whether Windows Error Reporting (WER) sends additional second-level report data even if a CAB file containing data about the same event types has already been uploaded to the server. If you enable this policy setting WER does not throttle data; that is WER uploads additional CAB files that can contain data about the same event types as an earlier uploaded report. If you disable or do not configure this policy setting WER throttles data by default; that is WER does not upload more than one CAB file for a report that contains data about the same event types.