You want it to be unique to this title, but you can use * to wildcard the end of the string if you are careful to keep it unique to this title.įill in the executable and version: infopath.exe 12.0 You’ll see InfoPath 2003 there.Ĭlick the Add link under Software Title Versions.įill in the Packages: you can probably use “Microsoft Office InfoPath 2007 - 12.*” but check the unmapped packages list – filter using “infopath” and see if you have it in your inventory already and add it from there. In the software catalog, search for Software Title “infopath” It looks like we have InfoPath 2007 in the Catalog, but it appears only under the suite (and not as a standalone). it is not ambiguous so the registry data is not needed … In other words, according to the catalog, the only way the application could possibly be there is if it was installed via that suite.) If one of the applications in the suite is appears under only that one edition in the Catalog (i.e.The registry says “Microsoft Office Enterprise 2007 - 12.*” At least one of the applications included in the Enterprise edition of the suite is present. The only way those machines would report Office 2007 Enterprise is if one of these is true: How did InfoPath get on those machines if not installed as part of an Office 2007 Enterprise install? Maybe you installed Office 2007 Pro and then you added the standalone InfoPath 2007 to the machines? (According to This may be a sledgehammer approach but after this the install ran through OK.( imported comment written by SystemAdmin) So to remove this I had to run windows explorer as Administrator then I deleted all hidden files and this subdirectory in "c:\programdata\Application Data\Microsoft Help" I saw that there was a hidden Office directory in the folder "%allusersprofile%\Application Data\Microsoft Help" Type cd "%allusersprofile%\Application Data\Microsoft Help", and then press ENTER.īut this did not work for me as rgstrtn.lck did not exist. Click StartStart button, and then type cmd in the Start Search box.Ģ. Type del rgstrtn.lck, and then press ENTER.ġ. Type attrib -h rgstrtn.lck, and then press ENTER.Ĥ. Type cd "%allusersprofile%\Application Data\Microsoft Help", and then press ENTER.ģ. Click Start, click Run, type cmd, and then click OK.Ģ. įirst do this and then after that do this:ġ. This was driving me mad as there was no error log file I could find and I had followed numerous suggestions on various web sites such as.
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