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Scorp
Posts: 234
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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running vista... i installed an old sata drive i had from a windows xp box and it's now sitting as D:\ (c:\ being my drive with windows on it) the problem is whenever i touch files under d:\ uac pops up asking me if i want to cancel or allow. I've tried setting all ownership for the files and subdirs to be my new user... anyone know how to get around this without disabling UAC ? thnx
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| #0 10:22am 20/12/08 |
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system
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dais
Posts: 8271
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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You need to find the key to the Delta Complex.
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| #1 10:23am 20/12/08 |
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Spook
Posts: 23735
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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why have uac on at all?
its f***ing annoying; |
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| #2 10:39am 20/12/08 |
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scuzzy
Posts: 13203
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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You need to find the key to the Delta Complex.1 Gold star |
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| #3 10:43am 20/12/08 |
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Tollaz0r!
Posts: 9376
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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I agree.
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| #4 10:54am 20/12/08 |
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3dee
Posts: 2859
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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+1 for killing UAC on first login...
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| #5 11:32am 20/12/08 |
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whoop
Posts: 13233
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Move files off drive, format using vista, copy files back? Maybe there's some file permission set somewhere vista doesn't like.
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| #6 11:35am 20/12/08 |
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parabol
Posts: 5052
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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+1 for killing Fixed. Vista recently blocked me from installing Firefox on a fresh Administrator account, gg. |
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| #7 11:37am 20/12/08 |
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ctd
Posts: 6757
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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You need to find the key to the Delta Complex. lulz |
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| #8 11:46am 20/12/08 |
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Konquest
Posts: 2
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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You need to find the key to the Delta Complex. lol, classic, you don't get much better than that.. btw what was microsofts aim of UAC?? Annoyance is the only one I can think of.. |
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| #9 11:14pm 20/12/08 |
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whoop
Posts: 13240
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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^^ It's supposed to help secure your PC against rogue software just installing itself or doing naughty things to system files but yeah after a while it becomes more of a nuisance than anything.
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| #10 11:27pm 20/12/08 |
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Pinky
Posts: 253
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
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+1 for UAC Adds extra level of security to user or auto-triggered events. I am only as annoyed by UAC as sudo under Linux - both I think are necessary and both I can handle the annoyance. |
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| #11 11:31pm 20/12/08 |
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Tollaz0r!
Posts: 9377
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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What sort of pages do you guys visit that needs so much security?
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| #12 09:09am 21/12/08 |
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Pinky
Posts: 258
Location: Melbourne, Victoria
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:looks left: :looks right: Who's asking? |
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| #13 10:58am 21/12/08 |
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Jim
Posts: 8998
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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it doesn't matter what sort of pages you visit, this is how you should use a computer responsibly
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| #14 11:57am 21/12/08 |
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Scorp
Posts: 236
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Thanks whoop!
Also anyone with windows vista who turns things off like the file version rollback feature, background file indexing, uac, windows protector, system restore etc etc moss well be running widows 2000 or xp. People who use all these features and have had them each contribute to helping from day to day (like i have seen uac save me from malware at least twice before) would understand why vista is such a great operating system now that its been patched up a bit. Then again, like most of the trollrats on this thread, it's much easier to 'bahh' along with all the other sheep and not actually test/experience the world yourself just follow what everyone else says/does! kgogo you 'smart' sheep!! |
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| #15 02:58pm 22/12/08 |
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Midda
Posts: 2949
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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I can appreciate what UAC is trying to do. I have it disabled because I feel it's a bit -too- invasive, but I think I'll leave it enabled in Windows 7 (they've scaled it back somewhat, from what I've read). Even still, it's no more annoying than sudo in Linux, which I've dealt with no worries.
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| #16 03:12pm 22/12/08 |
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MrHardware
Posts: 4116
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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moss well be "may as well be" |
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| #17 04:11pm 22/12/08 |
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3dee
Posts: 2861
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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I can appreciate what UAC is trying to do. I have it disabled because I feel it's a bit -too- invasive, but I think I'll leave it enabled in Windows 7 (they've scaled it back somewhat, from what I've read). Even still, it's no more annoying than sudo in Linux, which I've dealt with no worries. Agreed. Its certainly useful from a security perspective but its used way too much. Mac OS has a similar feature (but actually asks you for your password) but only pops up on the rare occasion you need to install something or change a driver or some critical system change, not when you want to change the wallpaper or maybe drag an icon across the screen (overly exaggerated examples which I'm sure are completely false...). The difference is, when Mac OS X asks me for my password to continue, its usually once every few days or a week, whereas Vista will be asking me to continue several times a session. But then again, I've practically forgotten what viruses and malware are like in Mac OS X... **hint hint nudge nudge Microsoft** last edited by 3dee at 16:54:53 22/Dec/08 |
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| #18 04:54pm 22/12/08 |
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Midda
Posts: 2951
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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But then again, I've practically forgotten what viruses and malware are like in Mac OS X... **hint hint nudge nudge Microsoft** Not quite sure what you're hinting at Microsoft to do, there. Reduce their marketshare to a minority? |
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| #19 07:10pm 22/12/08 |
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Scorp
Posts: 241
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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I've practically forgotten what viruses and malware are like in Mac OS X then i'm sure you've also forgotten how easy it is to install and run almost all software available that doesn't come pre-installed on your mac not to mention games... |
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| #20 07:16pm 22/12/08 |
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3dee
Posts: 2862
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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Not quite sure what you're hinting at Microsoft to do, there. Reduce their marketshare to a minority? Same, no real point of that. Eh. See below I guess. then i'm sure you've also forgotten how easy it is to install and run almost all software available that doesn't come pre-installed on your mac not to mention games... What? Drag .app bundle into "/Applications/" and off we go? I haven't had any security problems with my Mac at all. I don't even think of security risks on my computer anymore. If I can completely forget about "security risks" on my Mac then maybe Apple has done a decent job (or maybe noone cbf making any malware)... |
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| #21 07:31pm 22/12/08 |
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Midda
Posts: 2952
Location: Brisbane, Queensland
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If I can completely forget about "security risks" on my Mac then maybe Apple has done a decent job (or maybe noone cbf making any malware)... Not saying that Apple don't do a good job at security, but I think the latter of your statement as more to do with it than anything. I'll be very surprised if the iPhone doesn't end up having f***loads of malware floating around soon (if it doesn't already), considering it's getting a large amount of marketshare in the mobile phone business. What? Drag .app bundle into "/Applications/" and off we go? I think he was talking about software availability more than ease of installation. last edited by Midda at 21:17:43 22/Dec/08 |
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| #22 09:17pm 22/12/08 |
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Hogfather
Posts: 2271
Location: Cairns, Queensland
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UAC is annoying and in your face because the software and apps you are using - including some MS stuff! - is requiring access to protected parts of the OS or file system. Things like HKLM (machine registry), boot sector, root area of drives, writing out to the reserved Program Files folder etc etc.
This isn't a new thing - since NT 4 (earlier?) users have had limited access to stuff, and the best practice guidelines in how to work with permissions in Windows has been around forever. Its just that everyone ran their computers with local admin and vendors got really lazy, so a lot of bad practices became de facto normal. Proper seperation of user and admin context had to happen for Windows to become more secure. A random exe just shouldn't have as much power as it does on most XP desktops where the user is an admin. UAC itself is no more invasive than su or any other method of assuming root or admin when needed. Its just that lots of software needs you to do it just to run at the moment. Fortunately its also a big fat arrow pointing at chuckleheads to fix their code :) last edited by Hogfather at 02:39:31 23/Dec/08 |
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| #23 02:39am 23/12/08 |
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