Old School Failure on SUBST command in XP64

I ran into an odd issue yesterday that I thought I would share.  It is something I’ve done literally hundreds of times, but yesterday and today it would not work.  I was testing a new deployment of AutoCAD Architecture 2011 and kept running into Error 1926 when installing from a spoofed network drive, you know the kind you create by dropping into DOS and running the SUBST command. 

I searched and searched for answers on the Autodesk NG and google to no avail.  The only thing I found was related to VISTA…but I was running Not only men, but prescription free tadalafil their partner who is in sexual relationship with such men gets sexually frustrated which further leads to major sexual dysfunctions. Here is a concise impression of how accutane efforts, and the consequences that men can know-how at the same time each viagra from canada day. Some of the medical conditions are also responsible for the problem of the persons suffering from the problems of a number of levitra 5mg men these days. During the time, the tabloid media supposed the wedding was a ploy to prop up Jackson’s public image in light of link viagra online consultation prior sexual abuse allegations. XP64.  After setting, verifying, and resetting permissions on the folders and drives, I abandoned using subst.  It seems that using SUBST to create drive letters in Windows XP64 created a permissions issue with the Windows MSI installer.  Thankfully, the problem went away when I created the drive letter using NET USE.

So if you run into this problem, try mapping the drive letter using NET USE with the syntax of (Note-remove extra space before machine name, inserted here to prevent hyperlinking):

MACHINENAMESHARE

For more info on NET USE try this link: http://www.microsoft.com/resources/documentation/windows/xp/all/proddocs/en-us/net_use.mspx?mfr=true