Can someone explain to me the logic behind UAC? Sometimes starting a program brings up the UAC window. Sometimes it doesn't. On some programs, I removed running them as administrator, and the UAC disappeared. UAC's appearing seems quite random to me, and I see no logic in its appearance--or disappearance.
For the programs I start often, I've created an elevated program shortcut without the UAC prompt, according to Brink's excellent tutorial.
UAC is basically to allow you (administrator) to allow or deny a program from running elevated (Run as administrator) or not instead of it just running elevated without you knowing it.
The NOTE box at the top of the tutorial below can give you more details on what UAC is and what it's purpose is though.
Can someone explain to me the logic behind UAC? Sometimes starting a program brings up the UAC window. Sometimes it doesn't. On some programs, I removed running them as administrator, and the UAC disappeared. UAC's appearing seems quite random to me, and I see no logic in its appearance--or disappearance.
For the programs I start often, I've created an elevated program shortcut without the UAC prompt, according to Brink's excellent tutorial.
Thanks.
People in Vista said UAC seemed over protective so they allowed you to change the security on Windows 7 (Follow brinks link)
For example when you change a setting on your pc (your password for instance) the UAC wont pop-up if you left it on the default setting but when you install a program it asks Windows for permission and you must confirm it.