Sooo.... I'm an administrator??


  1. Posts : 13
    Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit SP1
       #1

    Sooo.... I'm an administrator??


    Hi Folks,

    I have two questiones concerning Windows-7 Home Premium.

    1. There are two user accounts, Mine as well as a single guest account. Iy seems as though I log into the computer as an administrator. However, as I try to delete a shortcut on the desktop, the system, I am told that I "need to provide administrator permission to do that.", and "you require permissions from Administrators to make changes to this file."
    2. A second issue ( Happens to be Eudora, a mail client ) when I start it. I get a pesky message telling me that: "Eudora was unable to update your system registry. Your default mail program has not been changed."
    Does a Home Premium O/S not allow me access to these issues?

    Regards,

    Paul
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 6,668
    Windows 7 x64
       #2

    Run as Administrator
    That should fix the problem for the mail program.

    As for the other issue, have you looked at user accounts in the control panel and verified that your account is in fact a administrator account?
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 197
    Win7 Ultimate x64, Server 2008 R2
       #3

    jPaulB said:
    Hi Folks,

    I have two questiones concerning Windows-7 Home Premium.

    1. There are two user accounts, Mine as well as a single guest account. Iy seems as though I log into the computer as an administrator. However, as I try to delete a shortcut on the desktop, the system, I am told that I "need to provide administrator permission to do that.", and "you require permissions from Administrators to make changes to this file."
    2. A second issue ( Happens to be Eudora, a mail client ) when I start it. I get a pesky message telling me that: "Eudora was unable to update your system registry. Your default mail program has not been changed."
    Does a Home Premium O/S not allow me access to these issues?

    Regards,

    Paul
    Yes, definitely take Maguscreed's suggestion and try running the program As Administrator. If you are an Administrator (there are only two types of users in Windows 7, Admins and Standard Users), then you will be met with a prompt that asks if "you want to allow this program to make changes to your system" and has a Yes and No button. If you see a place to type in a username and password, then your account is NOT an Admin account.

    Also, in Windows 7, the registry is protected. Applications' ability to change it has been deprecated for security reasons, and a method of protection called Virtual Registry has been implemented instead. I'm not sure why the Virtual Registry did not get called in this case; I'm going to check into Eudora specifically and see how it interacts with Windows 7.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 13
    Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit SP1
    Thread Starter
       #4

    Thank you for helping.

    My account is "Administrator".

    I don't have any idea why I can't simply delete this shortcut. I can and have deleted other shortcut icons.

    Thanks again,

    Paul
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 197
    Win7 Ultimate x64, Server 2008 R2
       #5

    Is this the version you're using? I couldn't find a newer one.

    If so, it is likely that it's a 16-bit application or an old 32-bit app. If you're running Windows 7 64-bit, it will simply not work. If you're running 32-bit, you might be able to get it to work by applying a compatibility mode. Compatibility Mode

    Try our suggestions and let us know what works.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Sooo.... I'm an administrator??-eudora.png  
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 197
    Win7 Ultimate x64, Server 2008 R2
       #6

    jPaulB said:
    Thank you for helping.

    My account is "Administrator".

    I don't have any idea why I can't simply delete this shortcut. I can and have deleted other shortcut icons.

    Thanks again,

    Paul
    Is it possible that you can give us a screenshot of the icon, and the error that pops up when you try to delete it?
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 31,242
    Windows 11 Pro x64 [Latest Release and Release Preview]
       #7

    Windows now uses a "Dual Token" security model to petter protect the system against the more advanced malware that is now prevalent.

    The administrator account now runs as a standard user as default - correctly written programs that require full administrative credentials can ask the system for this and the user is presented with the UAC prompt. The UAC prompt completely isolates the system from the input box which prevents the input being made by any malware.

    As a side effect of this the files permissions on the system do not give full access rights to a non administrative user, this can result in the issues you are experiencing. The workaround to these issues is to manually add your actual user name to the permissions of the area you wish to access
      My Computers


 

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