I have lost my profile, what should I do? Please close the game, log out then log back in to your Google Play / Game Center account, then reopen the game. Please make sure that you're using the Google Play or Game Center account that was associated to your original profile, and play through the opening stages of the game until you’ve entered. Generate a CSR from Windows Server using the certificate MMC Certificate MMC access. Run the MMC either from the start menu or via the run tool accessible fom the WIN+R shortcut. Click on File - Add/Remove Snap-in. Select Certificats in the left panel and click on Add.
I had a problem with CSR bluetooth 4.0 dongle and with its own software. It worked just fine until I restarted my pc. After that it just wouldn't connect to anything and did not even re pair with any of my bluetooth devices. I had this problem about 1 year and I finally found out a solution. Now I would like to share it in here, because I have found it to be a common problem.
I figured if it was a driver conflict with csr drivers and windows bluetooth drivers so I opened device manager from winkey+x menu. Then I selected bluetooth radio and delete driver (all of them bluetooth drivers), then I just installed manually CSR drivers (don't take bluetooth dongle out from the usb port and do not restart your computer before!) And like magic the problem disappeared and it has worked just fine after doing that. It has been over a week and it does work like it should have been from the beginning. Now I feel a bit stupid because the solution was so simple after all.
I really hope this helps everyone.
This 'user profile corruption' issue shows a number of different symptoms. One of them is the 'Start Menu doesn't work' symptom along with the 'Modern apps' don't work. In fact, the Start Menu and the Notification Panel (right side of screen) are implemented as modern apps, which explains why these all don't work as part of the same syndrome. If you create a new user profile, that new user profile will work just fine.
I spent a week researching and trying to fix this issue for a friend. I tried renaming usrclass.dat and ntuser.dat files; using sfc and dism, etc. There seems to be no way to surgically fix the issue within the damaged user profile. I ended up just moving all his files to a new user profile and painstakingly recreating his settings (Outlook is especially a PITA to move). This machine was upgraded from Windows 7.
Another symptom is the one I'm currently having. I installed a brand new HP printer on the LAN and used the HP disk to install all the software and create the printer objects, install the drivers, etc. Chrome and Adobe Acrobat can print. So can the HP diagnostic tool. BUT, the Windows printer test page fails. And Microsoft Office 2013 apps cannot print--they spool a job for about 1/4 second and then the job disappears without a trace. IF the Office apps are run As Administrator, they will print. Yet, if you create a new user profile, a Windows printer test page will print and Office apps can print as well. This is happening on machines that were upgraded from Windows 7 and from Windows 8.1.
A lot of folks are reporting similar problems and not getting useful answers. A useful answer would include (a) a specific determination of which part of the registry, etc. is broken and why, and (b) provide a specific correction to that broken part. The 'solutions' I have seen I would call desperation moves, such as re-applying all packages, or moving a user to a new user profile or even re-installing Windows. I say 'desperation' because they don't identify what is happening and they take a brute force approach to resolving the issue.
Having done 7 Windows 10 upgrades, I am now of the opinion that UPGRADING to Windows 10 over an existing user profile IS NOT RELIABLE. It appears to produce a whole range of bizarre operational symptoms. Unfortunately, I think the only way Microsoft will give you a free Windows 10 is if you upgrade in place. Therefore, I think the only reliable way to get a free Windows 10, at the moment, is to do the upgrade in place, then use a tool like ProduKey to determine your new WIndows 10 key and then do a clean re-install of Windows 10. You'll need to first make Windows 10 installation media using the Media Creation Tool and do the necessary backups, etc. But having done this now for one system, I believe it is the procedure that gets you the most reliable and stable end result.
Cheers!
Brad