Network administrator rights vista


















An instructor should be able to demonstrate their technical competency through performance and demonstration in the classroom. I want to convey to my students that learning is a lifelong process. Northwest Vista College Bobby began working at Northwest Vista College in and was appointed program coordinator for the Network Administration Program which he is still managing.

Bobby Yeater ryeater1 alamo. John Grillo jgrillo alamo. Emily Coppin ecoppin alamo. The Alamo Colleges District will begin the spring semester remotely with most scheduled classes meeting online from January Select programs that require in-person attendance will be held onsite. Visit alamo. Contact your network administrator to request access.

I am the administrator and I can't get the bloody permissions to work! I don't want safe mode booting and any other pointless suggestions that would probably go over my head. I want a simple answer that will fix this problem without having to disable Anti virus or firewalls or rebooting through safe mode. Why eliminate an option that worked?

Give me something that WILL work! This thread is locked. You can follow the question or vote as helpful, but you cannot reply to this thread. Threats include any threat of suicide, violence, or harm to another. Any content of an adult theme or inappropriate to a community web site. Any image, link, or discussion of nudity. Any behavior that is insulting, rude, vulgar, desecrating, or showing disrespect. Any behavior that appears to violate End user license agreements, including providing product keys or links to pirated software.

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Any image, link, or discussion related to child pornography, child nudity, or other child abuse or exploitation. Microsoft removed Homegroup from Windows build and that caused problems for networking. To get you PC's to visible under File Explorer network section then most important part is to start some required services. Look more details about sharing from my example how I have setup my network to work with Win 10 Was this reply helpful? Yes No.

Sorry this didn't help. Thanks for your feedback. Check in event log about those "access denied" messages you get. Might contain more detailed info. This can help quite some Win10 victims who are clueless after the changes in groups for computers. So, type in the IP address to make a connection if the name in text gives no full permission.

Try opening one pc on the other computer by typing its ip address plus two backslashes proceeding the numbers, in a windows explorer window. Also don't use an internet browser: it must be windows explorer, you use to find C: etc.

You gotta google that yourself. Your Administrator account should not be left enabled without a password. So, have a look around, but don't move in. And when you're done, I strongly urge you to re-enable your user account s and promptly disable the Administrator account. If your goal in accessing the Administrator account is to ditch User Account Controls, a somewhat safer way to do that would be to stick with your account with computer-administrator privileges the one that is not named Administrator.

Open the User Account Control Panel. On the subsequent screen, you'll find an easy way to turn off UAC. There is another possible wrinkle on Method 2. It is possible to set a password for your Administrator account. But there's another way to manage user accounts: the User Accounts Control Panel. User Accounts doesn't display any settings for the Administrator account until you're booted into that account.

But once you're booted into Administrator, it lets you set a password for it without any negative effects. So this is a work-around if you'd like to leave your Administrator account enabled. It's important to protect it with a password that's not easy to guess or arrive at by trial and error. Despite what it may seem to some people, Microsoft's decision to disable and lightly hide the Administrator account in Windows was a very good one. Millions of people have for many years been living in this account -- many without even having set a password for it.

Doing so makes it easy for malware and hackers to waltz into an account that has unlimited access to the operating system. By changing the name for the account on your computer that has administrative privileges, and by setting a password for it, Windows security is raised considerably.

The user experience for dealing with User Account Control elevations, although improved in Windows Vista Post-Beta-2 Build , is still a little rough. Microsoft has designed UAC in a way that keeps you from having to reboot between changes, but there are still too many nuisance UAC prompts. There's still development time to go on Vista's User Account Controls. Online editorial director Scot Finnie has been an editor for a variety of IT publications for more than 20 years. This article was adapted from the July issue of Scot's Newsletter and is used by permission.

Scot Finnie, former Editor in Chief of Computerworld, is a freelance writer with decades of experience covering the IT industry. Here are the latest Insider stories. More Insider Sign Out. Sign In Register.



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