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| Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance) |
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yes Cal, but when i installed Vista and the name of the administrator was asked, i did put in my name, so there is nobody else to refer too. In this case i am the only administrator, and not having problems with it. Sometimes Vista says: "you need administrator rights", give me a break here Bill (Gates): Anyway that moment i just enter and pass on to the next screen. François -- f_vo |
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"f_vo" wrote in message
... yes Cal, but when i installed Vista and the name of the administrator was asked, i did put in my name, so there is nobody else to refer too. In this case i am the only administrator, and not having problems with it. Sometimes Vista says: "you need administrator rights", give me a break here Bill (Gates): You apparently have UAC enabled. If you don't like it, disable it. -- Chris Cowles Gainesville, FL |
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or just right click the mouse and go to create a shortcut and type in cmd and then when your done that right click on it and go to advanced it should pop up on the right page and click admin and your done easy as xp just gotta know what your doing -- chuckiepatt |
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steaminshrooms;462356 Wrote: oh, right...you're going to need to run as an administrator. so to do that, right click on the batch file you've created, click create shortcut. the name shouldn't matter. right click the shortcut, click properties. go to the 'shortcut' tab, click 'advanced', and then check the check box to run it as an admin. then just run your batch file from the shortcut, and windows should ask you for permission each time. you can use a similar method if you open command prompt's properties when you locate it via search. you know you can just right click on the desktop and go to create a shortcut and type in cmd and do everything you said about the admin... and that is way easier -- chuckiepatt |
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steaminshrooms;462356 Wrote: oh, right...you're going to need to run as an administrator. so to do that, right click on the batch file you've created, click create shortcut. the name shouldn't matter. right click the shortcut, click properties. go to the 'shortcut' tab, click 'advanced', and then check the check box to run it as an admin. then just run your batch file from the shortcut, and windows should ask you for permission each time. you can use a similar method if you open command prompt's properties when you locate it via search. you know you can just right click on the desktop and go to create a shortcut and type in cmd and do everything you said about the admin... and that is way easier -- chuckiepatt |