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#11
I used the instructions from the tutorial.
Built-in Administrator Account - Enable or Disable
If I need to have the admin account active, is there a way not to display this at the logon screen ?
I used the instructions from the tutorial.
Built-in Administrator Account - Enable or Disable
If I need to have the admin account active, is there a way not to display this at the logon screen ?
If you really insist on doing this then look here:
login - How to hide admin account and only show main user at logon screen in Windows 7? - Super User
But remeber you will not be able to login to Admin unless you edit the registry every time. That in my view would not be a good choice. One false move and you will have lost the ability to login with anything!
I tried this method and unfortunately it didn't work as I wanted, as the standard user still had no option to enter the admin password.
Also this method is very difficult to reverse as there is no way to edit the registry without an admin account. It has taken me a few hours to get my PC back to normal.
Then I can see why you got that message. Whether you have UAC enabled or not when in a standard user account you do not have permissions to defrag a hard drive or any other system husbandry for that matter. It wouldn't make sense to give all your users this option as they might just as well be given full Admin permissions!
BTW I think you will find if you search through this Forum that the general opinion of most of the experts here say that with Windows 7 you do not need third party clean up software, that provided within Windows 7 is quite sufficient for most needs. Indeed there is a big raft of opinion that suggests that some of these third party programs especiall registry cleaners do more harm than good. It's always as well to seek expert opinion here before installing and using these programs.
EDIT: Our posts crossed there but I think my post explains why you can't edit the registry in a standard user account.
Just interested by why is it so necessary to hide the admin account at the login screen?
I was doing an experiment where i could hide the admin account and use a standard account to use the PC as normal, a bit like working in a office environment and not showing the admin account but without using windows server.
I can see that it's possible to hide the admin account but not found a method where the UAC prompts work normally by asking for the admin password when either installing a program or running a system command.
Please read this and you will perhaps believe me when keep say that in a standard user account you CANNOT install a program or edit system settings
What is a standard user account?
There is a very similar discussion in this thread,
Hide enabled Administrator count from normal logon screen
With a possible solution posted by Brink,
Log On with User Name and Password