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#16
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UAC
"Alex Clayton" wrote in message ... "Alex Clayton" wrote in message ... "Gordon" wrote in message ... "Alex Clayton" wrote in message ... Well it doesn't pop up here "everytime" I try to "do something" and I run a Standard User account. What might you be trying to do? When I put my MS office 07, when I put the MS security pack, today when I loaded Live mail, when I loaded Fire fox it seems to constantly ask. I know on the Vista machine I have I turned it off shortly after buying it, but can't even remember now how I did it. I had heard they had tweaked this feature in W7 because of so many people doing what I did on my Vista, just turning it off. I found the answer on my own here. I was reading mail and Firefox wanted to add another add on. When UAC popped up I noticed it had a place to click to see options and there was the slider. Dropped in down one notch, will see what that does. For when/if you want to adjust it again: Control Panel User Accounts and family Safety User Accounts Change UAC settings. |
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#17
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UAC
"Gordon" wrote in message
... "Alex Clayton" wrote in message ... "Gordon" wrote in message ... "Alex Clayton" wrote in message ... Well it doesn't pop up here "everytime" I try to "do something" and I run a Standard User account. What might you be trying to do? When I put my MS office 07, when I put the MS security pack, today when I loaded Live mail, when I loaded Fire fox it seems to constantly ask. I know on the Vista machine I have I turned it off shortly after buying it, but can't even remember now how I did it. I had heard they had tweaked this feature in W7 because of so many people doing what I did on my Vista, just turning it off. Well I don't know what you are doing, or what might be strange about your computer set-up - I use all those and the ONLY time I got UAC was on first installing - that was that. I don't get it on running anything. At all. I found the slider. Firefox wanted to put an add on for Yahoo. When I said yes the UAC popped up, and just before I said yes I noticed it had a line to click on, that takes you to the slider. It was set in the middle, I dropped it down one notch. Will see how it works now. -- "Everything in excess! To enjoy the flavor of life, take big bites. Moderation is for monks." [Lazarus Long] |
#18
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UAC
"Dave-UK" wrote in message
... "Alex Clayton" wrote in message ... "Alex Clayton" wrote in message ... "Gordon" wrote in message ... "Alex Clayton" wrote in message ... Well it doesn't pop up here "everytime" I try to "do something" and I run a Standard User account. What might you be trying to do? When I put my MS office 07, when I put the MS security pack, today when I loaded Live mail, when I loaded Fire fox it seems to constantly ask. I know on the Vista machine I have I turned it off shortly after buying it, but can't even remember now how I did it. I had heard they had tweaked this feature in W7 because of so many people doing what I did on my Vista, just turning it off. I found the answer on my own here. I was reading mail and Firefox wanted to add another add on. When UAC popped up I noticed it had a place to click to see options and there was the slider. Dropped in down one notch, will see what that does. For when/if you want to adjust it again: Control Panel User Accounts and family Safety User Accounts Change UAC settings. Great, thanks. Now hopefully I can remember that if I want to change it later. G -- "Everything in excess! To enjoy the flavor of life, take big bites. Moderation is for monks." [Lazarus Long] |
#19
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UAC
"Gordon" wrote in message
... "Worn Out Retread" wrote in message ... "Gordon" wrote in message ... "Worn Out Retread" wrote in message ... I am getting a new computer for my wife and it will be running Windows 7 64 bit. I want to set it up so that she can turn it on and it will boot right to the desktop You've thought about the security implications of this? She is the only user other than myself and if someone steals the computer, the password protection is easily bypassed by someone who knows how. So you have no visitors who might, in an idle moment start looking? You have NO personal and sensitive data on the machine? Logon passwords are easily passed by if you know how. |
#20
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UAC
"Worn Out Retread" wrote in message ... "Gordon" wrote in message ... "Worn Out Retread" wrote in message ... "Gordon" wrote in message ... "Worn Out Retread" wrote in message ... I am getting a new computer for my wife and it will be running Windows 7 64 bit. I want to set it up so that she can turn it on and it will boot right to the desktop You've thought about the security implications of this? She is the only user other than myself and if someone steals the computer, the password protection is easily bypassed by someone who knows how. So you have no visitors who might, in an idle moment start looking? You have NO personal and sensitive data on the machine? Logon passwords are easily passed by if you know how. Absolutely. I'm not talking about someone who might be carrying a password cracker on a USB stick but someone who might casually "have a look"... Secondly it makes it slightly more difficult for malware to insert itself if the user is a) not logged on as an Administrator and b) has a passworded user account... |
#21
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UAC
On Thu, 3 Dec 2009 15:51:54 -0000, "Gordon"
wrote: "Worn Out Retread" wrote in message ... "Gordon" wrote in message ... "Worn Out Retread" wrote in message ... I am getting a new computer for my wife and it will be running Windows 7 64 bit. I want to set it up so that she can turn it on and it will boot right to the desktop You've thought about the security implications of this? She is the only user other than myself and if someone steals the computer, the password protection is easily bypassed by someone who knows how. So you have no visitors who might, in an idle moment start looking? You have NO personal and sensitive data on the machine? Who in the heck has visitors who idly wander over to a running computer and start poking around? Might be time to evaluate what kind of people you invite over. |
#22
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UAC
On Thu, 3 Dec 2009 20:10:21 -0000, "Gordon"
wrote: "Alex Clayton" wrote in message m... "Gordon" wrote in message ... "Alex Clayton" wrote in message ... Well it doesn't pop up here "everytime" I try to "do something" and I run a Standard User account. What might you be trying to do? When I put my MS office 07, when I put the MS security pack, today when I loaded Live mail, when I loaded Fire fox it seems to constantly ask. I know on the Vista machine I have I turned it off shortly after buying it, but can't even remember now how I did it. I had heard they had tweaked this feature in W7 because of so many people doing what I did on my Vista, just turning it off. Well I don't know what you are doing, or what might be strange about your computer set-up - I use all those and the ONLY time I got UAC was on first installing - that was that. I don't get it on running anything. At all. If people want to turn off what they consider to be an annoying behavior, it would be nice if you just let them instead of demanding to know what they are doing or why they want to do it. I'm just saying... |
#23
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UAC
Char Jackson wrote:
If people want to turn off what they consider to be an annoying behavior, it would be nice if you just let them instead of demanding to know what they are doing or why they want to do it. I'm just saying... Spoken like a true Windows sop......all the secure OSs like UNIX, Linux etc have had this for YEARS - no-one complains about it because it's there for a REASON - protection against rogue applications. Now Windows has it, everyone complains! (And boots straight to the desktop without any thought of security either). As I said - MILLIONS of users don't GET UAC when running a Vista or Win 7 compatible application as a Standard User, therefore there is something wrong with the OP's setup, which he ought to fix rather than by-passing security... |
#24
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UAC
Gordon wrote:
Char Jackson wrote: If people want to turn off what they consider to be an annoying behavior, it would be nice if you just let them instead of demanding to know what they are doing or why they want to do it. I'm just saying... Spoken like a true Windows sop......all the secure OSs like UNIX, Linux etc have had this for YEARS - no-one complains about it because it's there for a REASON - protection against rogue applications. Now Windows has it, everyone complains! (And boots straight to the desktop without any thought of security either). As I said - MILLIONS of users don't GET UAC when running a Vista or Win 7 compatible application as a Standard User, therefore there is something wrong with the OP's setup, which he ought to fix rather than by-passing security... So, you allow anyone in your house to make changes to your system? And linsux prevents that how? |
#25
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UAC
chrisv wrote:
Gordon wrote: Char Jackson wrote: If people want to turn off what they consider to be an annoying behavior, it would be nice if you just let them instead of demanding to know what they are doing or why they want to do it. I'm just saying... Spoken like a true Windows sop......all the secure OSs like UNIX, Linux etc have had this for YEARS - no-one complains about it because it's there for a REASON - protection against rogue applications. Now Windows has it, everyone complains! (And boots straight to the desktop without any thought of security either). As I said - MILLIONS of users don't GET UAC when running a Vista or Win 7 compatible application as a Standard User, therefore there is something wrong with the OP's setup, which he ought to fix rather than by-passing security... So, you allow anyone in your house to make changes to your system? And linsux prevents that how? By asking for a password before any System changes are authorised. Just like UAC in fact... |
#26
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UAC
"Gordon" wrote in message
... chrisv wrote: Gordon wrote: Char Jackson wrote: If people want to turn off what they consider to be an annoying behavior, it would be nice if you just let them instead of demanding to know what they are doing or why they want to do it. I'm just saying... Spoken like a true Windows sop......all the secure OSs like UNIX, Linux etc have had this for YEARS - no-one complains about it because it's there for a REASON - protection against rogue applications. Now Windows has it, everyone complains! (And boots straight to the desktop without any thought of security either). As I said - MILLIONS of users don't GET UAC when running a Vista or Win 7 compatible application as a Standard User, therefore there is something wrong with the OP's setup, which he ought to fix rather than by-passing security... So, you allow anyone in your house to make changes to your system? And linsux prevents that how? By asking for a password before any System changes are authorised. Just like UAC in fact... Heheh It's a bit annoying, at times, but I prefer the security. |
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