Related topics

change time without admin rights?
We just made a policy change that took admin rights away from users. So instead of users having admin rights, they now have power users rights. My question is, will this prevent Auto Update from installing updates from our SUS? The reason I ask, is that I noticed on one of my test machines that when I log on with a

detecting admin rights for users
Since the printer object itself did not block inherited rights, I could then log in as that user, make it a trustee of the object itself with full supervisor rights, and use those rights to correct the rights of the other trustees. I couldn't do it using my own login because my admin rights derive from the role

Admin rights not available on NT 4 Workstation
... lOk:= FALSE ENDIF ENDIF FreeLibrary(DllExHandle) RETURN lOk Jean http://www.rayonline.com "Ulrich Trutter" <Ulrich.Trut...@t-online.de> a écrit dans le message de news:hhp0s35d7obi2f314c1hb9si8v77d5206c@4ax.com... Does anyone know, how I can find out from my VO-app, if the user has admin-rights or not. TIA Ulrich.

Local Admin rights / User Rights
I´ve got a PC for my childrens and somehow they´ve change the rights to open programs. Nothing is openable because I´ve got no rights to open the program. I can´t install anything, I can´t open the admin rights (don´t know the english translation) in the control panel so I can´t really do anything.

Granting all users Admin Rights
It sounds as though you've either (a) given all of your users domain admin rights, or (b) you haven't used simple ACLs on the resources to protect them. Once you do use ACLs, be sure to enable auditing on them..that way you can track the usage. Removing the admin shares (on a side note) is simply a Registry key

{Bridge Works:119} Running w/out Admin Rights
Giving those users admin rights is not an option, we had gone down that road before and vow never to do it again. This issue is particularly bothersome as we are in the process of upgrading all of our machines to XP SP1 and some of them will have the adminpak.

Connecting to MAS200
Trut...@t-online.de comp lang clipper visual-objects On Sun, 24 Feb 2008 21:09:07 +0000, "Geoff Schaller" <geo...@softwareobjectivesx.com.au> wrote: If you read a few of the websites on the subject, many conclude that the best way to determine admin rights is to attempt to do things an admin should be able to do

Getting Admin Rights Back
See the list of tools in Supplement 4 at tip 1468 at my 'NT Reg Hacks' at http://www.jsiinc.com On Wed, 19 Jan 2000 02:16:31 -0800, sturl...@online.no wrote: Can anyone give me a tool for giving a script admin rights on a NT-workstation? I have a tool running upgrades (NT-service packs, office-service packs etc)

MSDE on NT4 with out Admin Rights.
Re-prompt for restart wi scheduled installations (15 minutes) - Reschedule AU scheduled installations (wait after start up 2 minutes) - Specify Intranet Microsoft update service location (http://servername) So, does this mean that a non-admin user will be forcibly logged off or will they be given a prompt/dialog

ADmin rights?
Bruce Barr bruce...@clark.net comp os netware misc On Sun, 25 Mar 2001 12:57:11 GMT, Sunny Choi <sc...@netstreamsol.com.au> wrote: Hi all, Currently only the LAN team in our organisation has admin rights to the NDS tree. We are now under pressure from the Helpdesk to grant them admin rights to all containers so

Enterprise Manager - does it require Admin rights?
I believe the recommended way to 'decouple' the assignment of admin rights with the regular creation of a user account is via creating and using an organizational role object. If you make an organizational role object with the same rights as admin, and add yourself to that role, do your filesystem rights work on

win2k raw socket admin rights problem
Larry Veden l2ve...@gmail.com bridge-works-net-support Unfortunately the Admin Rights aspect is a function of the Click Once install. There are a couple of alternatives we are pursuing to correct this defect. At the present we ask for your patience until we have. Thank, Larry Veden On 2/11/08, cowlitzcounty_IT

Age of Mythology - Requirement for Administrator Rights
It alerts you when a program or process wants to do something that requires admin rights, and it's asking you to grant permission. If you turn it off, any piece of malware that get's on your system can run in an admin context and cause major problems. Also turning off UAC turns off protected mode for internet

grant admin rights
Robert Schieck (TeamB) rschi...@mers.com interbase public general In article <81j46k$5...@forums.borland.com>, Jo wrote: I need to use a dbuser with admin rights in my program. I tried to grant the rights to this user as follows: grant sysdba to MyUser with admin otpion The system table rdb$user_privileges shows

Admin Rights and Add/Remove Programs Question
If the numbers really start weighing heavily towards it being costlier to maintain the machines for the people with full admin rights (which it will do if they are doing things that they shouldn't be doing and the regular user folks don't really need a lot of things done by admins for them) you will probably find

AD design - loophole where admin can elevate admin rights to ...
We have a domain on which I would like our local users to have admin rights on their own PC. However, although they have admin rights assigned on their local machine it seem to be overriden when the user signs into the domain. What is causing this? The only way I can see around it is to assign the users domain

Local Admin Rights
Matthew Mucker [MSFT] mat...@online.microsoft.com microsoft public windowsxp security_admin To argue the other side of the coin, why DO you need administrator rights? Does your job require you to do something on your machine that requires you to be an administrator? If not, then it would be hard to make an argument

Full rights on DC without giving Domain Admin rights?
Larry andyclan wrote: Following earlier posts re nt4 and W98 client logon problems I have had to reinstall NT4Wstn and managed to get users to logon at W98 unit BUT only by making each user a member of a group with admin rights (domain admins) but this cannot be right surely?! if set users as members of users or

PictureIT with admin rights
Usually it is set up with just the supervisor rights to the subtrees of interest because pretty much covers everything. Also remember that you can't make your new admin user Security Equivalent and then the driver security equivalent to your admin user because Security Equivalence is not inherited in eDirectory.

How to give a user certain rights without giving them ADMIN rights
Steve Foster [SBS MVP] steve.fos...@picamar.co.uk microsoft public backoffice smallbiz2000 Admin rights are irrelevant within Outlook. Which version of Outlook are you using? Assuming Outlook 2000, take a look at this: OL2000: (CW) What Are Offline Folders and How Do You Use Them?