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On Wed, 8 Oct 2008 19:16:20 -0500, SIW2
wrote: Hi Luis, You could just add it to your right click context menu with this .reg file Or you can hold down the SHIFT key, right-click the folder and what you want is right there. |
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"Luis Ortega" wrote in message ... philo wrote: "Luis Ortega" wrote in message ... SCSIraidGURU wrote: take ownership of the folders. You could take ownership of the entire drive and all folders and subfolders. Try disabling UAC and see if this releases them. In Vista, disabled folders are usually protected with UAC. You really don't need access to them. Thank you, but how does one take ownership of a drive or folder? This is my first experience with Vista. If you search Google there is plenty of info on how to take ownership... however before you do so... some of the folders are not even meant to be accessed: see this http://www.realtime-vista.com/genera...uments_and.htm Personally I think it very confusing!!!! Thanks. It certainly is confusing. There are multiple instance of folders all over windows explorer. I have been trying to allow access and have succeeded on some but I am just flying blind and have no idea if I am screwing everything up. Some folders continue to be unaccessible and some are now accessible, but I don't know in what order to be doing this or what the parent stuff is all about. I suspect that any moment now I will render the whole computer useless and will be forced to reformat and reinstall the OS from scratch. That may be just as well, since I need to learn how to use this thing and I don't have a clue. Usually installing an OS is the first step in learning how it works. I am very familiar with xp and with building computers but this vista is just very weird. I wish that I could install xp on it but apparently there aren't any xp drivers for this laptop's devices. It's a new Dell Studio 1535. The hardware itself is nice but the OS is crap. http://www.nirmaltv.com/2008/07/11/h...ders-in-vista/ Vista is not XP, and you need to start learning how to use Vista. However, taking ownership of a c, folders and files in folders is no different than on XP. But, you can't take ownership of everything not on Vista like you could on XP. Some folders like Program Files, C:\Windows and registry keys etc etc have more protection applied to them then any previous version of the NT based O/S. Vista is not an open by default O/S like XP. Your out of the box user/admin account or any subsequent user/admin accounts are not user/admin accounts that have full admin access to everything, because those user/admin accounts don't inherit full admin rights from the built-in Administrator account like it does on XP, even with UAC disabled. This is the only user account on Vista that has full admin rights at all times that your Standard user(user/admin) account do not have the same rights. http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/windo...windows-vista/ http://www.computerperformance.co.uk/vista/vista_administrator_activate.htm#Summary_of_Vista_ Administrator_-_Super_User_(Hidden_Account) You should read about the *benefits* of using that built-in Administrator account. And here is where that Administrator account might come into play, as an example. http://chrisbensen.blogspot.com/2007...microsoft.html You should take the time to understand what is under the hood of Vista and how to use Vista, because it far out classes any previous version of the NT based O/S. http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/l.../cc709691.aspx http://news.softpedia.com/news/Admin...ta-45312.shtml http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/m.../cc138019.aspx http://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/m.../cc160882.aspx http://itsvista.com/2007/03/base-filtering-engine/ http://www.microsoft.com/whdc/device/network/wfp.mspx The key to Vista is to not install none Vista compliant software on Vista, like some solutions that are dedicated to run on the XP platform, because that is nothing but trouble on Vista as that can lead to other solutions and Vista itself to start aborting. http://www.bestvistadownloads.com/ There are more things under the hood of Vista that makes it different. You say you know XP. Then why can't you do the same with Vista.? However, you can disable things like UAC, run with the built-in Administrator account and shut down services, that will return you back to running on a malware bait O/S, just XP, with full admin rights as you run on the Internet wide open to attack, just like you did before. |
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Some folders continue to be unaccessible and some are now accessible,
but I don't know in what order to be doing this or what the parent stuff is all about. What folders are you talking about? Post the paths. I suspect that any moment now I will render the whole computer useless Yes, mucking about without knowing what you're doing tends to do that. |
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"Luis Ortega" wrote in message ... philo wrote: "Luis Ortega" wrote in message ... SCSIraidGURU wrote: take ownership of the folders. You could take ownership of the entire drive and all folders and subfolders. Try disabling UAC and see if this releases them. In Vista, disabled folders are usually protected with UAC. You really don't need access to them. Thank you, but how does one take ownership of a drive or folder? This is my first experience with Vista. If you search Google there is plenty of info on how to take ownership... however before you do so... some of the folders are not even meant to be accessed: see this http://www.realtime-vista.com/genera...uments_and.htm Personally I think it very confusing!!!! Thanks. It certainly is confusing. There are multiple instance of folders all over windows explorer. I have been trying to allow access and have succeeded on some but I am just flying blind and have no idea if I am screwing everything up. Some folders continue to be unaccessible and some are now accessible, but I don't know in what order to be doing this or what the parent stuff is all about. I suspect that any moment now I will render the whole computer useless and will be forced to reformat and reinstall the OS from scratch. That may be just as well, since I need to learn how to use this thing and I don't have a clue. Usually installing an OS is the first step in learning how it works. I am very familiar with xp and with building computers but this vista is just very weird. I wish that I could install xp on it but apparently there aren't any xp drivers for this laptop's devices. It's a new Dell Studio 1535. The hardware itself is nice but the OS is crap. I'd stick it out... again, some of the folders are not even 'real' folders...so as long as you can keep all your data in places where you can access if... I'd probably just keep things the way they are and get used to it. I personally am not a big Vista fan, but it's going to be around for a while... so I plan to slowly start using it... though I still mainly use Win2k !!! |
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