Yes it does.
It's called a roaming profile.
roaming profile
It's Mandatory User Profile: a roaming profile that users cannot change.
Roaming
In Windows NT, roaming user profiles are stored on a network share accessible to the user. This share is typically set up on a server, allowing the user's profile data to be downloaded to any workstation they log into. The profile information is synchronized between the user's local machine and the server upon login and logout, ensuring that personal settings and files are consistent across different devices. The path for the roaming profile is specified in the user account settings in the Active Directory.
The roaming profile will offer you the most protection, since it does as its name implies...follows you around on the computer
A Roaming profile is where setting established by a user at one computer are stored in a file on a file server on the network and shared with all computers in the workgroup, When a user moves from one computer to the next in the workgroup the roaming profile follows the user so that he or she does not have to redo settings at each computer. A Mandatory profile is a roaming profile that applies to all users in a user group, and individual users cannot change that profile. It is used in situations were users perform only specific job-related task.
Roaming data means collecting a network or signal from another network provider other than the original signal provider. This is generally used when someone is in abroad.
They are connected through a workgroup
Roaming user profile
roaming
Create a shared folder on a network server. Then, on the Profile tab in the user object's Properties dialog box, specify a path to the shared folder on the server. The next time the user logs on, the roaming user profile is created. I belive you have to also do that for both parts in there. The profile and home folder or just one. I also know you have the option to create there on network drive to there stuff but i dont think iits required