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Will[_8_]
November 30th 12, 12:28 PM
So I decided I should not have created that Admin account in the thread below.

How can I remove it?

In user a/c only user'er things can be done.
In Admin it say this is the only administrators account on the machine and can't be deleted - anyway how do you delete an account
whilst logged into that account?
It fibs, I found control userpasswords2 and it shows 'Administrator' (okay, may be hidden/inactive etc.) my 'Admin', the user
(required) and 'Guest' (I think this was "off").

I don't want to remove mine only to find the build in 'Administrator' account still shows.

Gordonbp
November 30th 12, 03:02 PM
On 30/11/12 12:28, Will wrote:
> So I decided I should not have created that Admin account in the thread below.
>
> How can I remove it?
>
> In user a/c only user'er things can be done.
> In Admin it say this is the only administrators account on the machine and can't be deleted - anyway how do you delete an account
> whilst logged into that account?
> It fibs, I found control userpasswords2 and it shows 'Administrator' (okay, may be hidden/inactive etc.) my 'Admin', the user
> (required) and 'Guest' (I think this was "off").
>
> I don't want to remove mine only to find the build in 'Administrator' account still shows.
>
>
>

If Windows 8 is anything like all other previous versions, the built-in
Administrator account cannot be deleted.

Zaphod Beeblebrox
November 30th 12, 03:39 PM
On Fri, 30 Nov 2012 12:28:03 -0000, "Will" >
wrote in article >...
>
> So I decided I should not have created that Admin account in the
> thread below.
>
> How can I remove it?
>
> In user a/c only user'er things can be done. In Admin it say this is
> the only administrators account on the machine and can't be deleted -
> anyway how do you delete an account whilst logged into that account?
> It fibs, I found control userpasswords2 and it shows 'Administrator'
> (okay, may be hidden/inactive etc.) my 'Admin', the user (required)
> and 'Guest' (I think this was "off").
>
> I don't want to remove mine only to find the build in 'Administrator'
> account still shows.

You need at least one account that is an administrator (in addition to
the hidden, disabled account called Administrator) so if that is the
only admin account you have set up, then you can't delete it.

--
Zaphod

"The best Bang since the Big One" - Eccentrica Gallumbits

Will[_8_]
November 30th 12, 09:23 PM
Okay, right or wrong I've "reset" the machine to original as I'd not done too much with it yet and the option was there.

Built daughter one account and left her to do what administration is ever required in the future - hopefully won't get into too
much of a mess (I didn't do so well myself!).

Activated windows, Installed a couple of things ahead for her. Only prompts as if UAC by doesn't need any other user/passwords to
do so - like a gentle version of must get you admin in.

Thanks all for the input.


Few questions left but will do some more research first, other than;- should her mess up her account password how can it get
resolved with no admin visible?

Gordonbp
November 30th 12, 09:39 PM
On 30/11/12 21:23, Will wrote:

>
> Few questions left but will do some more research first, other than;- should her mess up her account password how can it get
> resolved with no admin visible?
>
>

You do need to set up another Admin account, with a password, and use it
for emergency access only, and for elevation purposes.
If you run with only one user account then you are asking for trouble.

Gene E. Bloch[_2_]
November 30th 12, 10:00 PM
On Fri, 30 Nov 2012 21:39:08 +0000, Gordonbp wrote:

> On 30/11/12 21:23, Will wrote:
>
>>
>> Few questions left but will do some more research first, other than;- should her mess up her account password how can it get
>> resolved with no admin visible?
>>
>>
>
> You do need to set up another Admin account, with a password, and use it
> for emergency access only, and for elevation purposes.
> If you run with only one user account then you are asking for trouble.

The real Administrator account is there by default and not removable.
But you can't get there from here :-)

The trick is to open an elevated command prompt[1] and execute this
command:

net user Administrator /active:yes

Then log in (switch users) to the Administrator and do the dirty work.

When done, do the above command with "yes" replaced by "no".

[1] In the Start Orb search box, type cmd.exe or part of it, so that you
see the icon and label for Command Prompt above. Right click on that and
choose "Run as Administrator". Accept the UAC prompt and you're good to
go.

If you set up a password for the Administrator account, *don't* forget
it :-)

--
Gene E. Bloch (Stumbling Bloch)

mechanic
November 30th 12, 10:34 PM
On Fri, 30 Nov 2012 10:39:41 -0500, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote:

> You need at least one account that is an administrator (in addition to
> the hidden, disabled account called Administrator) so if that is the
> only admin account you have set up, then you can't delete it.

You can delete the user/administrator account from the Administrator
account - I've done it. Of course you need to enable the
Administrator account first to do this. I used the Local Users and
Groups Policy Editor (lusmgr.msc) to do this. I needed to do this
because for some reason Win8 installed with the wrong user name even
though the user account name was correct. The Windows installer
isn't very helpful on this. This is all very much the same as it was
in Windows7.

Dominique
December 2nd 12, 05:25 PM
"Gene E. Bloch" > écrivait news:18y29w7zv75hc
:

> On Fri, 30 Nov 2012 21:39:08 +0000, Gordonbp wrote:
>
>> On 30/11/12 21:23, Will wrote:
>>
<snip>
>
> [1] In the Start Orb search box, type cmd.exe or part of it, so that you
> see the icon and label for Command Prompt above. Right click on that and
> choose "Run as Administrator". Accept the UAC prompt and you're good to
> go.
>
<snip>

There is no Start Orb on my Windows8 installation, to get to the search
box, if you're on the Metro page, just start typing and the search box will
appear at the right of the screen, once search find a match, it will show
up at the left of the screen, you right-click on it and the "run as
administrator" command shows up at the bottom of the screen.

If you're on the desktop, point your mouse to the upper right corner and
the magnifying glass for the search box will appear, click on the glass and
type cmd in the box, the rest of the process is the same as above.

anotherpaul
December 2nd 12, 05:43 PM
On 2012-12-02, Dominique > wrote:
> "Gene E. Bloch" > écrivait news:18y29w7zv75hc
> :
>
>> On Fri, 30 Nov 2012 21:39:08 +0000, Gordonbp wrote:
>>
>>> On 30/11/12 21:23, Will wrote:
>>>
><snip>
>>
>> [1] In the Start Orb search box, type cmd.exe or part of it, so that you
>> see the icon and label for Command Prompt above. Right click on that and
>> choose "Run as Administrator". Accept the UAC prompt and you're good to
>> go.
>>
><snip>
>
> There is no Start Orb on my Windows8 installation, to get to the search
> box, if you're on the Metro page, just start typing and the search box will
> appear at the right of the screen, once search find a match, it will show
> up at the left of the screen, you right-click on it and the "run as
> administrator" command shows up at the bottom of the screen.
>
> If you're on the desktop, point your mouse to the upper right corner and
> the magnifying glass for the search box will appear, click on the glass and
> type cmd in the box, the rest of the process is the same as above.
>
If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
(admin) appears for selection.

Also, the "run" command is on the list.

Dominique
December 2nd 12, 07:45 PM
anotherpaul > écrivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
:

> On 2012-12-02, Dominique > wrote:
>> "Gene E. Bloch" > écrivait news:18y29w7zv75hc
>> :
>>
>>> On Fri, 30 Nov 2012 21:39:08 +0000, Gordonbp wrote:
>>>
>>>> On 30/11/12 21:23, Will wrote:
>>>>
>><snip>
>>>
>>> [1] In the Start Orb search box, type cmd.exe or part of it, so that
you
>>> see the icon and label for Command Prompt above. Right click on that
and
>>> choose "Run as Administrator". Accept the UAC prompt and you're good
to
>>> go.
>>>
>><snip>
>>
>> There is no Start Orb on my Windows8 installation, to get to the
search
>> box, if you're on the Metro page, just start typing and the search box
will
>> appear at the right of the screen, once search find a match, it will
show
>> up at the left of the screen, you right-click on it and the "run as
>> administrator" command shows up at the bottom of the screen.
>>
>> If you're on the desktop, point your mouse to the upper right corner
and
>> the magnifying glass for the search box will appear, click on the
glass and
>> type cmd in the box, the rest of the process is the same as above.
>>
> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
> (admin) appears for selection.
>
> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
>

Didn't know, thanks

I'm still learning.

Gene E. Bloch[_2_]
December 3rd 12, 01:49 AM
On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 19:45:54 +0000 (UTC), Dominique wrote:

> anotherpaul > ÛÍivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
> :
>
>> On 2012-12-02, Dominique > wrote:
>>> "Gene E. Bloch" > ÛÍivait news:18y29w7zv75hc
>>> :
>>>
>>>> On Fri, 30 Nov 2012 21:39:08 +0000, Gordonbp wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> On 30/11/12 21:23, Will wrote:
>>>>>
>>><snip>
>>>>
>>>> [1] In the Start Orb search box, type cmd.exe or part of it, so that
> you
>>>> see the icon and label for Command Prompt above. Right click on that
> and
>>>> choose "Run as Administrator". Accept the UAC prompt and you're good
> to
>>>> go.
>>>>
>>><snip>
>>>
>>> There is no Start Orb on my Windows8 installation, to get to the
> search
>>> box, if you're on the Metro page, just start typing and the search box
> will
>>> appear at the right of the screen, once search find a match, it will
> show
>>> up at the left of the screen, you right-click on it and the "run as
>>> administrator" command shows up at the bottom of the screen.
>>>
>>> If you're on the desktop, point your mouse to the upper right corner
> and
>>> the magnifying glass for the search box will appear, click on the
> glass and
>>> type cmd in the box, the rest of the process is the same as above.
>>>
>> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
>> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
>> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
>> (admin) appears for selection.
>>
>> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
>>
>
> Didn't know, thanks
>
> I'm still learning.

Me too. Sorry, I forgot that this was the Windows 8 newsgroup.

Thanks, anotherpaul, for saving the situation :-)

--
Gene E. Bloch (Stumbling Bloch)

anotherpaul
December 3rd 12, 03:21 AM
On 2012-12-03, Gene E. Bloch > wrote:
> On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 19:45:54 +0000 (UTC), Dominique wrote:
>
>> anotherpaul > ??ivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
>> :
>>

>>> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
>>> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
>>> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
>>> (admin) appears for selection.
>>>
>>> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
>>>
>>
>> Didn't know, thanks
>>
>> I'm still learning.
>
> Me too. Sorry, I forgot that this was the Windows 8 newsgroup.
>
> Thanks, anotherpaul, for saving the situation :-)
>
Me too! m$ seem to think that one has to learn about their OS until
it is no longer supported. Lots of hidden & changed stuff makes one
have to relearn. Just found that cannot map a network drive BUT have
to "mount" the drive & get a defaulted drive letter as looks like one
is not allowed to assign a preferred drive letter.

Will most likely encounter more gotchas from microsoft.

Tom Lake
December 3rd 12, 09:26 AM
"anotherpaul" wrote in message ...

On 2012-12-03, Gene E. Bloch > wrote:
> On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 19:45:54 +0000 (UTC), Dominique wrote:
>
>> anotherpaul > ??ivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
>> :
>>

>>> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
>>> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
>>> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
>>> (admin) appears for selection.
>>>
>>> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
>>>
>>
>> Didn't know, thanks
>>
>> I'm still learning.
>
> Me too. Sorry, I forgot that this was the Windows 8 newsgroup.
>
> Thanks, anotherpaul, for saving the situation :-)
>
Me too! m$ seem to think that one has to learn about their OS until
it is no longer supported. Lots of hidden & changed stuff makes one
have to relearn. Just found that cannot map a network drive BUT have
to "mount" the drive & get a defaulted drive letter as looks like one
is not allowed to assign a preferred drive letter.

In Win 8 you can still map a network drive and assign drive letters.
What made you think you can't?

Tom Lake

Zaphod Beeblebrox
December 3rd 12, 01:13 PM
On Fri, 30 Nov 2012 22:34:06 +0000, "mechanic" >
wrote in article >...
>
> On Fri, 30 Nov 2012 10:39:41 -0500, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote:
>
> > You need at least one account that is an administrator (in addition to
> > the hidden, disabled account called Administrator) so if that is the
> > only admin account you have set up, then you can't delete it.
>
> You can delete the user/administrator account from the Administrator
> account - I've done it. Of course you need to enable the
> Administrator account first to do this. I used the Local Users and
> Groups Policy Editor (lusmgr.msc) to do this. I needed to do this
> because for some reason Win8 installed with the wrong user name even
> though the user account name was correct. The Windows installer
> isn't very helpful on this. This is all very much the same as it was
> in Windows7.

Sigh. OK, yes, you can do that but only because you've enabled the
built-in Administrator account. The idea is you can't delete the last
*currently enabled* administrator-level account.

--
Zaphod

Pan-Galactic Gargle Blaster: A cocktail based on Janx Spirit.
The effect of one is like having your brain smashed out
by a slice of lemon wrapped round a large gold brick.

anotherpaul
December 3rd 12, 04:59 PM
On 2012-12-03, Tom Lake > wrote:
> "anotherpaul" wrote in message ...
>
> On 2012-12-03, Gene E. Bloch > wrote:
>> On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 19:45:54 +0000 (UTC), Dominique wrote:
>>
>>> anotherpaul > ??ivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
>>> :
>>>
>
>>>> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
>>>> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
>>>> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
>>>> (admin) appears for selection.
>>>>
>>>> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
>>>>
>>>
>>> Didn't know, thanks
>>>
>>> I'm still learning.
>>
>> Me too. Sorry, I forgot that this was the Windows 8 newsgroup.
>>
>> Thanks, anotherpaul, for saving the situation :-)
>>
> Me too! m$ seem to think that one has to learn about their OS until
> it is no longer supported. Lots of hidden & changed stuff makes one
> have to relearn. Just found that cannot map a network drive BUT have
> to "mount" the drive & get a defaulted drive letter as looks like one
> is not allowed to assign a preferred drive letter.
>
> In Win 8 you can still map a network drive and assign drive letters.
> What made you think you can't?
>
> Tom Lake
>
Didn't find a place to do that for my MBL. Did a right-click on the
drive & see "mount" which I did & it showed up on my drive listing as
"Z:". The "mapping" allows me to go directly into the MBL while
without it I can still listen to music or view videos just like any
DLNA client compatible device.

Can you post the procedure to get into the drive mapping as I didn't
see anything in the network area like that in win7.

Zaphod Beeblebrox
December 3rd 12, 05:34 PM
On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 16:59:27 +0000 (UTC), "anotherpaul" <file-box02@no-
hotmail.com.invalid> wrote in article >...
>
> On 2012-12-03, Tom Lake > wrote:
> > "anotherpaul" wrote in message ...
> >
> > On 2012-12-03, Gene E. Bloch > wrote:
> >> On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 19:45:54 +0000 (UTC), Dominique wrote:
> >>
> >>> anotherpaul > ??ivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
> >>> :
> >>>
> >
> >>>> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
> >>>> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
> >>>> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
> >>>> (admin) appears for selection.
> >>>>
> >>>> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
> >>>>
> >>>
> >>> Didn't know, thanks
> >>>
> >>> I'm still learning.
> >>
> >> Me too. Sorry, I forgot that this was the Windows 8 newsgroup.
> >>
> >> Thanks, anotherpaul, for saving the situation :-)
> >>
> > Me too! m$ seem to think that one has to learn about their OS until
> > it is no longer supported. Lots of hidden & changed stuff makes one
> > have to relearn. Just found that cannot map a network drive BUT have
> > to "mount" the drive & get a defaulted drive letter as looks like one
> > is not allowed to assign a preferred drive letter.
> >
> > In Win 8 you can still map a network drive and assign drive letters.
> > What made you think you can't?
> >
> > Tom Lake
> >
> Didn't find a place to do that for my MBL. Did a right-click on the
> drive & see "mount" which I did & it showed up on my drive listing as
> "Z:". The "mapping" allows me to go directly into the MBL while
> without it I can still listen to music or view videos just like any
> DLNA client compatible device.
>
> Can you post the procedure to get into the drive mapping as I didn't
> see anything in the network area like that in win7.

In Explorer (on the Desktop) right click Network int he left hand pane
and choose "Map network drive". There may be other places you can do
this, but that's the first one I came across.

--
Zaphod

Vell, Zaphod's just zis guy, ya know? - Gag Halfrunt

Ken Blake[_4_]
December 3rd 12, 07:30 PM
On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 17:25:53 +0000 (UTC), Dominique >
wrote:


> There is no Start Orb on my Windows8 installation,


Note that it's very easy to add the Start Orb yourself, with the free
Classic Shell, or with the somewhat better, very inexpensive, Start8.


--
Ken Blake

mechanic
December 3rd 12, 07:58 PM
On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 08:13:42 -0500, Zaphod Beeblebrox wrote:

> Sigh. OK, yes, you can do that but only because you've enabled
> the built-in Administrator account. The idea is you can't delete
> the last *currently enabled* administrator-level account.

What do you mean "Sigh"! You answered without mentioning this, I
expanded on your answer. Get over it.

anotherpaul
December 3rd 12, 08:47 PM
On 2012-12-03, Zaphod Beeblebrox > wrote:
> On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 16:59:27 +0000 (UTC), "anotherpaul" <file-box02@no-
> hotmail.com.invalid> wrote in article >...
>>
>> On 2012-12-03, Tom Lake > wrote:
>> > "anotherpaul" wrote in message ...
>> >
>> > On 2012-12-03, Gene E. Bloch > wrote:
>> >> On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 19:45:54 +0000 (UTC), Dominique wrote:
>> >>
>> >>> anotherpaul > ??ivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
>> >>> :
>> >>>
>> >
>> >>>> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
>> >>>> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
>> >>>> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
>> >>>> (admin) appears for selection.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
>> >>>>
>> >>>
>> >>> Didn't know, thanks
>> >>>
>> >>> I'm still learning.
>> >>
>> >> Me too. Sorry, I forgot that this was the Windows 8 newsgroup.
>> >>
>> >> Thanks, anotherpaul, for saving the situation :-)
>> >>
>> > Me too! m$ seem to think that one has to learn about their OS until
>> > it is no longer supported. Lots of hidden & changed stuff makes one
>> > have to relearn. Just found that cannot map a network drive BUT have
>> > to "mount" the drive & get a defaulted drive letter as looks like one
>> > is not allowed to assign a preferred drive letter.
>> >
>> > In Win 8 you can still map a network drive and assign drive letters.
>> > What made you think you can't?
>> >
>> > Tom Lake
>> >
>> Didn't find a place to do that for my MBL. Did a right-click on the
>> drive & see "mount" which I did & it showed up on my drive listing as
>> "Z:". The "mapping" allows me to go directly into the MBL while
>> without it I can still listen to music or view videos just like any
>> DLNA client compatible device.
>>
>> Can you post the procedure to get into the drive mapping as I didn't
>> see anything in the network area like that in win7.
>
> In Explorer (on the Desktop) right click Network int he left hand pane
> and choose "Map network drive". There may be other places you can do
> this, but that's the first one I came across.
>
Ahhh! THANK YOU! Gotta remember to do "right-click" more often. I
had expected that the prompt will appear like on win7 at the top of a
network screen.

Shows how much win8 hides more useful things than than in win7 or
change how to access stuff.

Still learning here also.

..winston
December 3rd 12, 08:54 PM
If a MSFT account was used for the initial account during installation the Windows logon name will be the MSFT account full email
address and the account name the MSFT Account user configured profile name.


--
....winston
msft mvp


"mechanic" wrote in message ...

You can delete the user/administrator account from the Administrator
account - I've done it. Of course you need to enable the
Administrator account first to do this. I used the Local Users and
Groups Policy Editor (lusmgr.msc) to do this. I needed to do this
because for some reason Win8 installed with the wrong user name even
though the user account name was correct. The Windows installer
isn't very helpful on this. This is all very much the same as it was
in Windows7.

Zaphod Beeblebrox
December 3rd 12, 08:59 PM
On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 20:47:27 +0000 (UTC), "anotherpaul" <file-box02@no-
hotmail.com.invalid> wrote in article >...
>
> On 2012-12-03, Zaphod Beeblebrox > wrote:
> > On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 16:59:27 +0000 (UTC), "anotherpaul" <file-box02@no-
> > hotmail.com.invalid> wrote in article >...
> >>
> >> On 2012-12-03, Tom Lake > wrote:
> >> > "anotherpaul" wrote in message ...
> >> >
> >> > On 2012-12-03, Gene E. Bloch > wrote:
> >> >> On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 19:45:54 +0000 (UTC), Dominique wrote:
> >> >>
> >> >>> anotherpaul > ??ivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
> >> >>> :
> >> >>>
> >> >
> >> >>>> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
> >> >>>> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
> >> >>>> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
> >> >>>> (admin) appears for selection.
> >> >>>>
> >> >>>> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
> >> >>>>
> >> >>>
> >> >>> Didn't know, thanks
> >> >>>
> >> >>> I'm still learning.
> >> >>
> >> >> Me too. Sorry, I forgot that this was the Windows 8 newsgroup.
> >> >>
> >> >> Thanks, anotherpaul, for saving the situation :-)
> >> >>
> >> > Me too! m$ seem to think that one has to learn about their OS until
> >> > it is no longer supported. Lots of hidden & changed stuff makes one
> >> > have to relearn. Just found that cannot map a network drive BUT have
> >> > to "mount" the drive & get a defaulted drive letter as looks like one
> >> > is not allowed to assign a preferred drive letter.
> >> >
> >> > In Win 8 you can still map a network drive and assign drive letters.
> >> > What made you think you can't?
> >> >
> >> > Tom Lake
> >> >
> >> Didn't find a place to do that for my MBL. Did a right-click on the
> >> drive & see "mount" which I did & it showed up on my drive listing as
> >> "Z:". The "mapping" allows me to go directly into the MBL while
> >> without it I can still listen to music or view videos just like any
> >> DLNA client compatible device.
> >>
> >> Can you post the procedure to get into the drive mapping as I didn't
> >> see anything in the network area like that in win7.
> >
> > In Explorer (on the Desktop) right click Network int he left hand pane
> > and choose "Map network drive". There may be other places you can do
> > this, but that's the first one I came across.
> >
> Ahhh! THANK YOU! Gotta remember to do "right-click" more often. I
> had expected that the prompt will appear like on win7 at the top of a
> network screen.
>
> Shows how much win8 hides more useful things than than in win7 or
> change how to access stuff.
>
> Still learning here also.

You are welcome. I'm also continuing to find / look for where MS has
moved things. I don't get their desire to rearrange the furniture - I
mean, what possible benefit is there?

--
Zaphod

Adventurer, ex-hippie, good-timer (crook? quite possibly),
manic self-publicist, terrible bad at personal relationships,
often thought to be completely out to lunch.

anotherpaul
December 4th 12, 02:47 AM
On 2012-12-03, Zaphod Beeblebrox > wrote:
> On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 20:47:27 +0000 (UTC), "anotherpaul" <file-box02@no-
> hotmail.com.invalid> wrote in article >...
>>
>> On 2012-12-03, Zaphod Beeblebrox > wrote:
>> > On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 16:59:27 +0000 (UTC), "anotherpaul" <file-box02@no-
>> > hotmail.com.invalid> wrote in article >...
>> >>
>> >> On 2012-12-03, Tom Lake > wrote:
>> >> > "anotherpaul" wrote in message ...
>> >> >
>> >> > On 2012-12-03, Gene E. Bloch > wrote:
>> >> >> On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 19:45:54 +0000 (UTC), Dominique wrote:
>> >> >>
>> >> >>> anotherpaul > ??ivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
>> >> >>> :
>> >> >>>
>> >> >
>> >> >>>> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
>> >> >>>> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
>> >> >>>> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
>> >> >>>> (admin) appears for selection.
>> >> >>>>
>> >> >>>> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
>> >> >>>>
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> Didn't know, thanks
>> >> >>>
>> >> >>> I'm still learning.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Me too. Sorry, I forgot that this was the Windows 8 newsgroup.
>> >> >>
>> >> >> Thanks, anotherpaul, for saving the situation :-)
>> >> >>
>> >> > Me too! m$ seem to think that one has to learn about their OS until
>> >> > it is no longer supported. Lots of hidden & changed stuff makes one
>> >> > have to relearn. Just found that cannot map a network drive BUT have
>> >> > to "mount" the drive & get a defaulted drive letter as looks like one
>> >> > is not allowed to assign a preferred drive letter.
>> >> >
>> >> > In Win 8 you can still map a network drive and assign drive letters.
>> >> > What made you think you can't?
>> >> >
>> >> > Tom Lake
>> >> >
>> >> Didn't find a place to do that for my MBL. Did a right-click on the
>> >> drive & see "mount" which I did & it showed up on my drive listing as
>> >> "Z:". The "mapping" allows me to go directly into the MBL while
>> >> without it I can still listen to music or view videos just like any
>> >> DLNA client compatible device.
>> >>
>> >> Can you post the procedure to get into the drive mapping as I didn't
>> >> see anything in the network area like that in win7.
>> >
>> > In Explorer (on the Desktop) right click Network int he left hand pane
>> > and choose "Map network drive". There may be other places you can do
>> > this, but that's the first one I came across.
>> >
>> Ahhh! THANK YOU! Gotta remember to do "right-click" more often. I
>> had expected that the prompt will appear like on win7 at the top of a
>> network screen.
>>
>> Shows how much win8 hides more useful things than than in win7 or
>> change how to access stuff.
>>
>> Still learning here also.
>
> You are welcome. I'm also continuing to find / look for where MS has
> moved things. I don't get their desire to rearrange the furniture - I
> mean, what possible benefit is there?
>

At least win8 let us have a different task bar color when a solid color
is used as the desktop color & not some fancy theme; haven't found the
place for changing the taskbar text color tho. May have missed the
taskbar color/text changing in win7.

Read on "The Inquirer" that someone leaked that microsoft will start
releasing a version of windows each year like apple & google. A way
to make more money from "upgrades" instead of having service packs.

Rob
December 4th 12, 09:10 PM
On 4/12/2012 7:47 AM, anotherpaul wrote:
> On 2012-12-03, Zaphod Beeblebrox > wrote:
>> On Mon, 3 Dec 2012 16:59:27 +0000 (UTC), "anotherpaul" <file-box02@no-
>> hotmail.com.invalid> wrote in article >...
>>>
>>> On 2012-12-03, Tom Lake > wrote:
>>>> "anotherpaul" wrote in message ...
>>>>
>>>> On 2012-12-03, Gene E. Bloch > wrote:
>>>>> On Sun, 2 Dec 2012 19:45:54 +0000 (UTC), Dominique wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>>> anotherpaul > ??ivait news:k9g3vv$4u3
>>>>>> :
>>>>>>
>>>>
>>>>>>> If on the Desktop, move mouse pointer to bottom left corner; when the
>>>>>>> metro page icon appears, right click & a look-like old start column
>>>>>>> appears where both the regular command prompt & the command prompt
>>>>>>> (admin) appears for selection.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Also, the "run" command is on the list.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Didn't know, thanks
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'm still learning.
>>>>>
>>>>> Me too. Sorry, I forgot that this was the Windows 8 newsgroup.
>>>>>
>>>>> Thanks, anotherpaul, for saving the situation :-)
>>>>>
>>>> Me too! m$ seem to think that one has to learn about their OS until
>>>> it is no longer supported. Lots of hidden & changed stuff makes one
>>>> have to relearn. Just found that cannot map a network drive BUT have
>>>> to "mount" the drive & get a defaulted drive letter as looks like one
>>>> is not allowed to assign a preferred drive letter.
>>>>
>>>> In Win 8 you can still map a network drive and assign drive letters.
>>>> What made you think you can't?
>>>>
>>>> Tom Lake
>>>>
>>> Didn't find a place to do that for my MBL. Did a right-click on the
>>> drive & see "mount" which I did & it showed up on my drive listing as
>>> "Z:". The "mapping" allows me to go directly into the MBL while
>>> without it I can still listen to music or view videos just like any
>>> DLNA client compatible device.
>>>
>>> Can you post the procedure to get into the drive mapping as I didn't
>>> see anything in the network area like that in win7.
>>
>> In Explorer (on the Desktop) right click Network int he left hand pane
>> and choose "Map network drive". There may be other places you can do
>> this, but that's the first one I came across.
>>
> Ahhh! THANK YOU! Gotta remember to do "right-click" more often. I
> had expected that the prompt will appear like on win7 at the top of a
> network screen.
>
> Shows how much win8 hides more useful things than than in win7 or
> change how to access stuff.
>
> Still learning here also.
>


Bottom left corner of the desktop screen when the start screen icon pops
up - right click that and more useful navigation aids come up in a menu.

Google