Actually not so good. I am thinking I need to create this into a new discussion but this is what my biggest issue is now. Just this morning we had 2 users call saying it told them when they first tried to log in that their password had expired and they need to change it. It then brought them to the screen with their username already filled in, Domain filled in, and the open fields for Old password: New password: Confirm new password:. When entering the information they receive an error message stating "unknown user name or bad password", your only option is to click ok. It then brings you back to the screen to create a new password only now that this point the username field is blank but greyed out so you can't manually enter it. The user typically doesn't realize it and attempts to enter the old and new passwords again assuming they typed it in wrong the first time. They then receive the message "authentication can not proceed (missing parameter)" due to the user name filed being blank. Again the only option is to click OK, it then brings them back to the first screen for the connection server field. I documented this process on my zero client with a test ID I knew was past expiration and it resulted in the same thing the users are reporting. Please see the attached images (forgive the quality, had to take them with my cell phone since there was no where to paste a screenshot). The even stranger thing about all of this is that it does infact change the password to what the user typed into the New password fields, but there is nothing hinting at this for the user to know, I only know because I have tested it many times. But usually by the time the user calls me to report their issues they have tried it multiple times and we cannot figure out which password the account is currently set at resulting in I having to reset their password in Active Directory. *Note that when I choose the option "User must change password at next logon" in AD, this issue does not occur, it is only when the user passes their expiration date.