I do hear you Les but let me describe our environment. About 70% of the machines have touch screens with no keyboards, these particular pc's take about 30 -45 minutes to complete migration vs a p4 which takes about 5 minutes. The users already sulk when we have down time, So any issues that will arise can become a major headache for me. Also we have about 1000 of these machines and only 2 IT staff on duty per shift. I really don't want to work hard. In addition, if something doesn't work then we would rather they revert back untill we resolve the problem, therefore deleting the old computer account might just make it worse because it take away this option.

Re: Howard, my pc was definatly migrated and the computer accounts exists on both domains. I really don't know why @Domain sometimes reports the incorrect domain. I suppose the only way to really test if it was properly migrated would be to remove the trusts... That would be bad at this stage. Also that doesn't then ensure that there is a user account for them in the new domain. So I would still need to do that check. (Which have working now just the computer search remains). If I an can confirm that @Domain is giving an accurate result then that would mean a lot of the machines we have already migrated are not done properly. Maybe I could use this to verify if the migration was a success and not a flop which maybe my pc is? How does @domain determine where your computer account resides?