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Old June 6th, 2004, 08:36 PM
Chad Harris
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Continual Error 1321 Trying to Install Office 2003

Mary--

I want to thank you again. I got a chance to look at your site, and I truly
appreciate the high quality of help that MS MVPs and others unselfishly
offer on the Office/Outlook groups day after day that allows you to get a
lot of valuable links and between the lines help/ learning to supplement
books.

As to evidence of which app installed wisptis, I suppose you'd have to set
view to show the criteria for origin, date, or notice when you're doing it,
or associate a download date from your downloads file if you save the
download setups, zips, .exes, ect in a downloads folder. I just know Office
2003 sure wants to install it and stalls when it can't because the progress
bar freezes with wisptis front and center and then I get all the
config.msi.rbf error messages.

Is there any way in the world to get into setup with some custom tool from
the Resource kit or somewhere else and surgically/selectively remove wisptis
which is the prime cause for my 1321 setup snag?

I want to ask this *first* because it hasn't been answered yet. Is there
any way to be able to surgically single out Wisptis and keep it off the list
of things setup is trying to get in? I tried last night to open up a
custom install with a tool for the resource kit because I couldn't do it
from the default setup with a custom install Probably not, but if that were
possible, if I could get into the guts of setup with some tool and nuke
wisptis, then I'd be able to get Office back in. I even wonder what tricks I
could play with this setup if I knew more dos--if I could get at the wisptis
file through the command prompt and keep it the ___ out of setup that way.

I don't know how you tell which of the 3 apps--the MSFT Journal Viewer,
Adobe Reader 6, or Office 03 installs wisptis--except by date of the install
if you configure the view to show that or can find it in your downloads
folder since almost everybody has Adobe Reader although maybe not 6, I do
have the Journal Viewer entry on the WICleanUP, but I don't know what
uninstalling it would do to help this problem now.

I want to be clear about a couple things so you know what I've tried; that
I'm glad to try anything you suggest, and that I appreciate your time and
effort. I search KBs pretty regularly, and the KB 231243 for the 1321
error (that was I found within seconds of setup balking) offered one thing
and that was to check a registry key value--my original post was long so you
might not have seen it but I had that value as zero so it didn't offer me
any setting that I didn't already have.

As far as Office plug-ins and Norton AV or System Works, I don't see any
Office plugs ins or even the same configuration with my version of Norton as
the help describes, but that's no surprise that has happened before.
Norton Help references looking in the "left pain under other" of the options
window for Office plug ins. There is no "other," and there is no "left
pain." and I've drilled options and don't see any mention of Office plug ins
on anything you can click. I don't see anything under web tools listed at
all. I'll be glad to uninstall Norton if I can get it to uninstall
cleanly--often a tricky proposition once you've had an SP2 build on your
machine because Seattle and Capertuino California are apparently not
speaking to one another and SP2 users are going to really enjoy the result
of that. No mention of that fact in the 300 million dollar ad campasomeone
is hatching for SP2 next month.

I checked for quotes in the setup.ini file MST section and found no quotes
and very little there per the KB 818239. I'm chewing on Install Shield doc
Q107388 now. I don't understand their reference to patching strategy unless
they mean some MSI patch. All Office 2003's are gone with it. The document
on patching strategy makes me wonder if any update or patch for install
shield from their library would help me. I also wondered if I could
redownload the MSI and refresh files and it would do any good.

I thought of trying Safe Mode but the MSI installer may not get loaded in
Safe Mode. I saw
http://support.microsoft.com/default...roduct=off2003
and wondered if the "setup.ini wizard" mentioned could help me if there were
one and there doesn't seem to be or at least they want to say if you use it
for 2003 since it's for Office XP and there are problems, don't look to us.

When I was working with the gentleman from *MSFT, he wanted to use the
Windows Installer Cleanup Utility but we couldn't *simply because* there was
no listing for MOS 2003 in it, so we couldn't select what wasn't there.
One thing I'd like to ask, is it not uncommon when someone has uninstalled
something let's say Office Systems 2003 or another version, that if there
are components to "clean up" that you'd still see an entry for Office 2003
after you uninstalled it? Because if that's not the case then once you
uninstalled you can't use that utility. If you uninstalled Office and you
don't see it, does that imply there aren't remnants for it to clean?

So the MSFT office specialist had a list of registry keys including GUIDs
and also all the Office folders he wanted to nuke, and nuke we did so
hopefully we could get it meticulously off. Office was working fine, I
just couldn't install BCM so the MSFT Office specialist wanted a clean
slate so he insisted that I uninstall Office. And any of us understand
that--files could be corrupt; registry strings or orphans could be a problem
and I agreed with that logic and uninstalled it. I didn't count on the so
not needed WISPTIS for tablet PCs would come back to bite me. Again I love
MSFT Office developer logic--less than .05% of people using Office even have
a tablet PC since it has so much evolving to do compared to a loaded quality
notebook with the newest features as far as a dollar choice, and it gobbles
CPU sometimes considerable CPU, so let's make it mandatory to install it.
__________________________________________________ __________________________
____________________________________________


*My Lack of MSFT Support Rant and View Hex Error Messages Do Nothing for the
User to Solve a Problem in Real Time so why offer them to the User?*


I was also running SP2 at the time as a Beta tester, and even though I had
tried to associate BCM before with SP2 uninstalled and going back to SP1,
they wanted to work with SP2 off. I don't believe that SP2 is the problem
with associating that desktop SQL MSDE with Outlook. I think it has more to
do with the fact that it's the first .net add in MSFT has had and they
pushed it out unfinished with a lot of problems as a fairly buggy Beta but
they called it RTM. No big precedent there--it happens with all their
software to degrees and certainly happens with the Windows OS and Office and
will be the case with Longhorn and Blackcomb. So here is this company who
is going to spend $300 million dollars to promote XP SP2 because they want
way more than 250 million legitimate copies sold--if SP2 is radically
different someone wake me up because I've read everything MSFT has written
on it. It baby sits and reminds people to use a firewall and update viral
definitions some of whom are much more concerned about the latest Kazaa lite
fileshare. That's why some of the best and brightest universities in the US
become viral infected every single day.

My point here is that this company that I like is going to spend this huge
amount of money promoting SP2--but they are telling me that they don't think
an Office component out of a $500 box of Office is compatible with what they
are feverishely trying to get on every OEM computer and the OEM companies
are perenially like somoene who is thirsty in the desert--they want moisture
and they aren't particularlly worried about whether the water is safe or
not. Anything that even hints of a new OS wrinkle the OEMs always push for.
You don't have to be a NYT, WSJ, IBD afficianado to get that. I think one
add campaign I won't see from whoever handles the promotion is "Watchout!!!!
Don't buy Office because SP2 won't work with one of the CD's in Office Pro
or Office Enterprise edition. We are recalling Office because of SP2.
SP2 isn't the problem with BCM, but it's a good excuse for Convergys to say
we don't support a Beta when they don't know anything about the Office
add-in BCM and they don't.

But once SP2 releases to manufacture with the major problem that it's not
compatible with Norton Internet Security or Norton System Works, and RC1 is
public now being promoted on TechNet's site as a download, so I am
perfectly OK in saying that using Norton will evoke screens that say it's
not compatible with SP2 builds (all of them). It must be further than I
thought from Redmond Washington to Cupertino California and I suppose MSFT
is not allowed to use Live Meeting or even Net Meeting that's still in XP by
putting "conf" in the run box, or a cell phone, or email out of Redmond to
communicate with Symantec Enterprise/Norton Home and Small Business users to
iron out the kinks. It won't be the first time. And I know for a fact
they've heard from plenty of people using SP2 on this.

At this time I want to point out how much help the all hex all the time
error messages are for the consumer or even the Sys Ad maven. Few people
have the tools and training to interpret these hex errors, so they are zero
help to most of us. The site .oca.microsoft.com the so-called crash
analysis site is completely and utterly worthless--I've played with it for
three years and never seen it yield anything but that there's no solution
for any given error at this time. What they're thinking with it I don't
know. I have heard people from Redmond speak of real time practical error
help about the time Longhorn every births, but Longhorn ain't no short term
solution and it's a different vision depending on what side of the bead Mr.
Allchin wakes up on. Right now helpful error messages are in the primitive
stages. Many of the KBs have little or no help and I've read a few
thousand, and many are superficial brushes by the subject like the single
one on the 1321 error with its reference to one registry key.

__________________________________________________ ___


*I mean MSFT because I want to be clear that Convergys can't and doesn't
support BCM. Its employees doesn't know anything about BCM and by and
large the phone support for MSFT is from Convergys employees, many of whom
want to keep it an NSA secret that they work for Convergys. I'd be hiding
as well if I were Convergys. They have a compelling reason to hide and MSFT
has a compelling reason to hide that they farm support out to them.

So I persisted in asking for help from MSFT. Call me silly. I believed
the Redmond company that makes and develops and writes code for the product
and sells it at quite a profit and lives quite well because of these sales
should actually support the product. Likewise the Convergys support route
knows next to nothing about Office setup problems as well but they call
themselves "set up specialists" much like a degree mill where you can buy a
Ph.D. in whatever field over the web in seconds and call yourself Dr. Bozo.

Chad Harris

__________________________________________________ __________________________
___________________________________________



"Mary Sauer" wrote in message
...
Hi Chad,
Have you tried cleaning up the Installer?
Description of the Windows Installer CleanUp Utility

http://support.microsoft.com/default...roduct=off2003

There is a knowledge base article that may relate.
Office 2003 Install May Fail When You Use a Transform File

http://support.microsoft.com/default...roduct=off2003

When you open Norton, near the top is the options button, this is where

you disable
office plug-ins. In my opinion Norton should be disabled altogether before

you
install.

Installshield has some documents too
ERRDOC: Windows Installer Error 1321
http://support.installshield.com/kb/...icleid=Q107388

I have wisptis on my computer, it was installed when I installed Office. I

also have
Adobe 6, but doing a search on my computer does not have show evidences of

it being
part of Adobe.

Have you setup a log?
How to use an Office 2003 Setup log file to troubleshoot Setup problems
http://support.microsoft.com/default.aspx?kbid=826511

Yours is a rare error... if you ever get it worked out let me know. I wish

I could be
more help. Hopefully someone will jump in here and solve it for you.

--
Mary Sauer MS MVP
http://office.microsoft.com/
http://www.mvps.org/msauer/
news://msnews.microsoft.com
"Chad Harris" wrote in message
...
Hi Mary--Thanks for taking a swing at this. I'm really greatful for any
help. Knocking out annoying Wisptis probably took config.msi files

that
it needs and now setup wants to stuff it back in. Wisptis is explained
below. It's installed by MOS 2003, the Journal viewer, and Adobe

Acrobat
Reader 6.0 from what I can see from googling it. I have Adobe 6 also.
Wisptis was uninstalled. I should have tried tip to get rid of it, and

I
should have thought of it it's so basic, but I didn't see it when I

went
after it--but this method just below might have still given me the

install
problem if it disabled or got rid of those config.msi files.

An easier way to do it is to right click on the file
C:\windows\system32\wisptis.exe, click Properties, go to the security

tab
and remove all permissions except An easier way to do it is to right

click
on the file C:\windows\system32\wisptis.exe, click Properties, go to the
security tab and remove all permissions except for Read

permissions.You'll
never see it run again.

*Where do you mean to go to "options" and disable Office plug-ins?*

What do
you think of trying to get back files that setup wants for its never

needed
turkey wisptis (unless you are using a paritcular tablet component)

using
System File Checker? At least running SFC rarely causes any problems.
Also do you think there is any way to download any tool for the resource

kit
that will let me do a detailed enough or selective enough custom install

to
single out wisptis and keep it from installing? My reasoning there is

if I
can keep wisptis from knocking on the door with the setup, the setup

will
move on to completion.

*I'm going to try what you suggested as soon as I can clear up the

answer to
where you mean by Options to disable plug-ins.*

I also wondered if by running System File Checker, I could get back any
config.MSI files would help, but setup is balking everytime on getting
wisptis in by saying it doesn't have access to certain different

numbered
config.msi files.

******** This all started out with my wanting to associate BCM with

Outlook
and now I can't get Office in. I'm ready to try setup with script
blocking disabled, but I'm not following where "in options" I can

disable
Office Plug-ins. Options on the Norton interface? IE Internet Options?

I
couldn't find any Office Plug-Ins. ********

I can't do any kind of repair from Maintainance Mode of course, because
Office is not installed. I saw the KB--it's no help. Like a lot of

KBs
it has a helpful sounding title with very little of substance inside.

The
problem with a 1321 setup error is all kinds of things can cause it. I

need
to explain to you what wisptis.exe is and how it came about.

Every time I try to run set up, it almost gets through and the the bar

stops
with good old wisptis.exe on the box. I put the wispis info below so

you
could browse it. I didn't want to distract from telling you at the top

what
I think happened. I got a removal tool from one of the sites below for
wiptis. I can see it as an .rar file in my downloads file. Also after
rereading the desciption I don't know if some reg key could have been
modified by wisptis to make reinstall of Office hard. Now when I try

the
setup, it runs to close to completion, then the progress bar stops with

the
label "installing wisptis.exe" * I think when I ran the removal tool
(successfully) to get rid of wisptis it also took out some some of the
config.msi files that good ole wiptis wants to install. 99.999999% of
people running Office don't use a tablet. The development teams and

product
managers for Office could have put it on a MSFT downloads site with

links
from the MSFT Office site. I'd love to see whoever got the great idea

to
explain what they were thinking when they wove it into Office 2003. Now

I
understand why I hear over and over and over that Redmond developers are
completely on a planet of their own, and often not even making great

contact
with the Product managers and their teams.

I was asked by a MSFT Office specialist to meticulously uninstall Office
which was working just fine. One thing that spooked people and I can't
explain is that for a transient period of time, I was getting an Outlook
2000 splash screen on opening Office 2003 but after that I was getting

the
normal Outlook splash screen. OL was working just fine; I just couldn't

get
BCM associated with it after trying every thing I could think of. I had
Office XP, and then when I got MOS 2003 I let setup uninstall it. I

mean
of course uninstalling and reinstalling MOS 2003 would be no big

deal--but I
had gotten a lot of extras from the MSFT site and others that were nifty

and
I hated going after them again. Here's some context for wisptis? Do you
have it showing up in processes on any of your MOS 2003 machines?


*What Wisptis is--among other things, certainly not needed in Micorosft
Office--it should have been an optional download.* I have long ago

given up
on trying to figure out the answer to "What were they thinkiing?" when

it
comes to developers or Product Teams on the Redmond campus. "Let's put

in a
pen data collection component for Tablet PC whether anyone has a tablet

or
not. It'll serve as a great memory hog with excellent potential to

freeze
computers and send CPU to 100%!!! But let's not tell anyone this can
happen. Let them be surprised."



http://216.239.57.104/search?q=cache...ptis.exe&hl=en


Wisptis.exe (\Windows\System32) This executable runs as a system
service that provides pen-data collection for other components of the
SDK. When a component needs to interact with the pen (for example, to
collect ink or to detect gestures), this executable is spawned as a
service to communicate directly with the input device. On a Tablet PC,
Wisptis.exe interacts with the digitizer, whereas on a desktop it
interacts with the mouse as well. The executable’s name is an acronym
that references an outdated internal name for the team that developed it
(Windows Ink Services Platform Tablet Input Subsystem).


--------------------------------------------------------------------------

--
----

Well I don't have a Tablet PC and I certainly don't want an unnecessary
process eating up my memory resources.

You cannot get rid of wisptis.exe by renaming or deleting it: Windows

File
Protection would cause it to reinstall the next time you run Adobe

Acrobat.

There is even a rumor about a bug in wisptis.exe itself whereby it keeps
part of the current user registry hive locked, preventing updates and
eventually resulting in a corruption of the registry hive (which as

reported
leads to a "Userenv event 1517" on logging off or shutting down).

Others reported GDI leaks and CPU hogging. I haven't noticed the latter

but
can confirm that at one point, the number of open GDI handles by

wisptis.exe
was above 1000, which is unacceptable.

So by and large it seems wisptis.exe can make a thorough nuisance of

itself.

To uninstall wisptis and Microsoft's Tablet PC Components on your PC,

you
must delete the following registry entries:

HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\AppID\{7F429620-16D1-471E-A81A-114992148034}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\AppID\wisptis.EXE
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{04A1E553-FE36-4FDE-865E-344194E69424}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{13DE4A42-8D21-4C8E-BF9C-8F69CB068FCA}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{242025BB-8546-48B6-B9B0-F4406C54ACFC}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{3336B8BF-45AF-429F-85CB-8C435FBF21E4}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{3EE60F5C-9BAD-4CD8-8E21-AD2D001D06EB}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{43B07326-AAE0-4B62-A83D-5FD768B7353C}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{43FB1553-AD74-4EE8-88E4-3E6DAAC915DB}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{524B13ED-2E57-40B8-B801-5FA35122EB5C}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{632A2D3D-86AF-411A-8654-7511B51B3D5F}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{65D00646-CDE3-4A88-9163-6769F0F1A97D}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{6E4FCB12-510A-4D40-9304-1DA10AE9147C}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{786CDB70-1628-44A0-853C-5D340A499137}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{836FA1B6-1190-4005-B434-7ED921BE2026}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{8770D941-A63A-4671-A375-2855A18EBA73}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{8854F6A0-4683-4AE7-9191-752FE64612C3}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{937C1A34-151D-4610-9CA6-A8CC9BDB5D83}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{9C1CC6E4-D7EB-4EEB-9091-15A7C8791ED9}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{9DE85094-F71F-44F1-8471-15A2FA76FCF3}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{9FD4E808-F6E6-4E65-98D3-AA39054C1255}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{A5558507-9B96-46BA-94ED-982E684A9A6B}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{A5B020FD-E04B-4E67-B65A-E7DEED25B2CF}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{AAC46A37-9229-4FC0-8CCE-4497569BF4D1}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{C52FF1FD-EB6C-42CF-9140-83DEFECA7E29}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{D8BF32A2-05A5-44C3-B3AA-5E80AC7D2576}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{DE815B00-9460-4F6E-9471-892ED2275EA5}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{E3D5D93C-1663-4A78-A1A7-22375DFEBAEE}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{E5CA59F5-57C4-4DD8-9BD6-1DEEEDD27AF4}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{E9A6AB1B-0C9C-44AC-966E-560C2771D1E8}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{EFB4A0CB-A01F-451C-B6B7-56F02F77D76F}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\CLSID\{F0291081-E87C-4E07-97DA-A0A03761E586}

HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Components\BCA32ECD550 E1F4488DBD2A1578ACF8B
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Features\7040110900063
D11C8EF10054038389C\WISPFiles
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Installer\Features\7040110900063
D11C8EF10054038389C\WISPHidden

HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TpcCom.* (all of them)

HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TypeLib\{194508A0-B8D1-473E-A9B6-851AAF726A6D}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TypeLib\{56D04F5D-964F-4DBF-8D23-B97989E53418}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TypeLib\{773F1B9A-35B9-4E95-83A0-A210F2DE3B37}
HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\TypeLib\{7D868ACD-1A5D-4A47-A247-F39741353012}

HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Curr

entVersion\Installer\UserData\S-1-5-18\Components\1125549C421D34E4DBF1036F62
580BE1
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Curr

entVersion\Installer\UserData\S-1-5-18\Components\652A08B235C6DFF4C8CD41B52D
E68CA4
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Curr

entVersion\Installer\UserData\S-1-5-18\Components\9B4B5940D4625D64C85532B8CD
E3BF4D
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Curr

entVersion\Installer\UserData\S-1-5-18\Components\D656DA4A9E277A34D90D5E6FFA
34E827
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Curr

entVersion\Installer\UserData\S-1-5-18\Products\7040110900063D11C8EF10054038
389C\Featu res\WISPFiles
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\Curr

entVersion\Installer\UserData\S-1-5-18\Products\7040110900063D11C8EF10054038
389C\Featu res\WISPHidden

Now you can also safely delete \Windows\System32\Wisptis.exe. Make sure

the
process is not running; otherwise kill it before deletion.

Fully tested on an up-to-date Windows XP SP1.
Wisptis is a Tablet PC platform component that someone on the Office
development team decided to load as far as I can tell with Office 2003,

even
though 99.9% of Office users don't have a Tablet interacting with their

PC.
It could have been made available on the Office site, the Windows Mobile
site, and the MS Tablet site, but no--they made it a mandatory install

as
far as I can tell. Most people tell me it's listed in processes when

they
install Office 2003, but some have said they don't see it. It takes up

CPU,
and when it's not in the system 32 folder it can be a virus or Trojan

like
so many normal processes exploited by them, and it's very difficult if

not
impossible to keep it from starting up. So I ran a toolfrom one of

these
sites to uninstall it and I think deleted a few reg keys associated with

it.
Now I think I'm paying the price.

I got the removal tool which did the job or the removal tool and the
sequence of steps from one of these sites:



http://www.boredguru.com/modules/dow...isit.php?lid=4



http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cache... s.exe+&hl=en

http://www.aswinnen.be/modules.php?n...article&sid=53



http://216.239.51.104/search?q=cache...article%26sid%

Couillon Inc. has fixed the issues with the WISPTIS.EXE process. You'll

see
your non-tablet PC freaking when this process is running, and you'll

have
this process running if you have Microsoft Journal Viewer or Adobe
Acrobat/Reader 6.0 or MS Office System 2003 installed

Of course this fix is available through our Downloads section.

Enjoy It!

UPDATE: We've re-released the fix with some minor improvements...

You can download it over here
3D53+wisptis.exe&hl=en

Thanks,

Chad Harris

__________________________________________________ __________________
"Mary Sauer" wrote in message
...
Do you have Norton? Disable "Script Blocking" and in options, disable

Office Plug-ins
before you install.
This document is for 2000 but it addresses your issue
Various Error Messages When MSI File Creates and Modifies Files and

Registry Keys
http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;232143

http://www.appdeploy.com/faq/msi_err...tail.asp?id=84

What is WISPTIS.exe? It is “Microsoft Tablet PC Platform Component”.


--
Mary Sauer MS MVP
http://office.microsoft.com/
http://www.mvps.org/msauer/
news://msnews.microsoft.com
"Chad Harris" wrote in message
...
One main question I have is can you custom install office to the

point
of
keeping one file or folder from installing which is my snag?
Are there any 2003 resource kit tools that will help you do this?

Will
using Office 2003 Editions Resource Kit
Ork.exe

or

Office 2003 Setup.exe (Enhanced Version)
EntSetup.exe 2/24/04 Approximate file size: 210 KB
A self-extracting executable (EXE) file that contains

Office
2003 Setup version 11.0.6176.0. For more information about the

benefits
of
this enhanced version, see New Setup.exe Fine Tunes Local Caching.


help me keep from installing wisptis.exe?


I posted this in the setup forum but from what I can tell the Setup


group
has *no one responding to setup problems.* It does have

miscellaneous
Office problems posted there that could be posted here where people

who
are
regulars here with help help with non-setup problems over there.

Every time I try setp, with of course AV off and even with an

"msconfig
clean boot, I get a 1321 setup error. Is it possible to custom

install
and tweak to the file level to leave out wisptis.exe, and is it

possible
to
install in Safe Mode or do you lose the MSI in Safe Mode or

something
else
needed to run the Office setup? I have tried naming these 3 files

to"
.old":
C:\Config.MSI file
Mapi32.dll
MAPI.dll

*Every time I try setp, with of course AV off and even with an

msconfig
clean boot, I get the setup error with a diffent numbered

C:\Config.MSI
file number. Is it possible to custom install and tweak to the file

level
to leave out wisptis.exe, and is it possible to install in Safe Mode

or
do
you lose the MSI in Safe Mode or something else needed to run the

Office
setup?*

MOS 2003 Pro install setup error on Win XP Pro SP1. I was having

trouble
getting the BCM add-in to associate with OL 2003. I was asked to

uninstall
BCM and MOS 2003 Pro and then to reinstall MOS 2003. MOS 2003 was

working
fine. With support help from MSFT Office specialist (not Convergys)

we
meticulously deleted the appropriate reg keys and files. We were

going
to
use the Windows Installer Cleanup Utility, but it didn't list MOS

2003
so we
did it manually.

http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;290301
I am getting the following setup errors and setup stops when trying

to
install wisptis.exe. Wisptis.exe is unfortunately installed with

MOS
and it
works with tablet PC. If you don't have a tablet, it stubbornly

starts
and
helps itself to CPU. Just ending it as a process or trying to use

msconfig
won't stop it. A CPU gobbler that far and away most of the

population
dosn't need as a gift from the MOS developers and product team with

every
Office installation is ridiculous, but someone at Redmond made that

call.
These two links context how to get rid of it and I used one of these

tools.
They work and wisptis.exe disappears from your procdesses. Now I

think
this
is causing me problems on the reinstall.

I took steps here to uninstall wisptis.exe and use the wisptis tool:

http://www.longhorn.be/modules.php?n...op=MostPopular



http://www.boredguru.com/modules/new...d=193&forum=24



I'm getting this Error: Error 1321: Setup cannot modify the file
C:\Config.MSI 3a5322.rbf. Verify that the file exists (it doesn't)

in
your
system and that you have sufficient permission to update it. Should

I
search for this to download it? Could it possibly have been

eliminated
iin
getting rid of the wisptis.exe annoyance?

File Extension Details for RBF: Roll Back File Backup of existing

file
stored in hidden CONFIG.MSI directory.

http://filext.com/detaillist.php?extdetail=RBF (3rd entry down)

KB that superficially references setup problem by referring to one

registry
value:
http://support.microsoft.com/default...b;en-us;232143

This KB deals with the error in Office XP and recommends checking a

registry
value here. My value is correct and conforms with this solution:

HKEY_Local_Machine/Software/Microsoft/Windows

NT/CurrentVersion/Winlogon
1.. In the right pane, right-click AllocateCDRoms, and then click

Modify.
2.. In the Value data box, type 0 (zero), and then click OK.

3.. Would appreciate if anyone has suggestions as to how to

overcome
this
setup error.

TIA,

Chad Harris