Can I change the user's Name and completely remove the old user name?


  1. Posts : 120
    Windows 7 Home Premium
       #1

    Can I change the user's Name and completely remove the old user name?


    I installed Win 7 x32 with a user name "user1" a long time ago. At some point I changed the User's name to "Karen" to make it easier to spot on the home network, etc. The Computer Name ("Dell3100") has not changed.

    Today I wanted to connect to the computer "Karen" using my workgroup (not a homegroup). All of my other computers now share with workgroup. However, the computer "Karen" does not require a password to logon so when I tried to connect via the workgroup, I got a popup box asking for the Credentials to Connect. I need to enter the User Name and Password to connect to "Dell3100". And I and wife don't know the password.

    Anyways, I reset the password using the "Reset Forgotten Password" tutorial going into registry etc.. That worked, but I still could not access the computer Karen - windows would not accept the password.

    Running "net users" I see that I don't have a User "Karen", I have a user "user1". So i used that user name with the new password and I'm connected. All is good.

    But how do I get rid of "user1" and replace with "Karen"? Can this be done?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 17,545
    Windows 10 Pro x64 EN-GB
       #2

    CountryBumkin said:
    But how do I get rid of "user1" and replace with "Karen"? Can this be done?
    When a new user is created in Windows, either the first user when Windows is installed or any user later on, and the new user has signed in to Windows first time, the user profile is created and named. Any later username change does not change the name of the user profile.

    An example, if my ex-wife had created a user account for me on a Windows computer she had most probably named it as "Idiot". If I then later on changed my username on that computer from "Idiot" to "Kari", my profile had remained as "Idiot".

    Basically, the easiest way to change this is to create a new user account and profile with the preferred name, copy the personal files and folders from C:\Users\Wrong_Username folder to C:\Users\New_Username, and delete the user Wrong_Username completely.

    In your case now you can try the method told in this tutorial: User Profile Folder - Change User Account Folder Name

    Kari
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 120
    Windows 7 Home Premium
    Thread Starter
       #3

    Thanks for your informative and humorous reply. I'll apply your advice/solution when I get home tonight.

    I know you assist on the other Windows forums too. Thanks for taking the time to assist us newbies.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 17,545
    Windows 10 Pro x64 EN-GB
       #4

    You are welcome :)
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 2,774
    Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
       #5

    Kari is correct, I learned that I cannot really change an account from nameX to nameY, only the "surface" changes, however, the account is the first name it become self-aware with. Kari offered what I had to do: create an account with the name I wanted, after copying, migrating, etc. everything over from nameX to nameY, I deleted nameX account.
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 17,545
    Windows 10 Pro x64 EN-GB
       #6

    In Windows 8 and later when signing in with a so called Microsoft Account this behavior is quite practical, Windows user profile keeping its name even when the username is changed.

    In Windows 8 or later if you set it up with an MS Account (a user account connected to an email) instead of a local account, your username will be YourEmail@AnyProvider.com, but Windows creates a profile acronym of five letters for this user. For instance if a user Larry Laffer with an MS Account larry.laffer@AnyEmailProvider.com creates a new user account in Windows 10 as an MS Account, his sign in name would be larry.laffer@AnyEmailProvider.com but his user profile folder would be C:\Users\LarLa or C:\Users\LarrL or anything similar; if the part of the MS Account email before the @ sign is six characters or longer, Windows creates a five character acronym of that and uses it as the name for the profile folder. Only if the first part of the email is five characters or less will the user profile folder be named correctly.

    I always create my user account first as a local account naming it Kari, then switch it to an MS Account after I have signed in first time. This gives me the profile folder name I prefer even when using an MS Account to sign in.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 2,774
    Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
       #7

    Kari, was that a Microsoft Account? I need to read better! A MS acct is obviously different than a regular Win7 or Win8, thanks for the info -- I'll remember that next time. :)
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 17,545
    Windows 10 Pro x64 EN-GB
       #8

    Yes, an MS (Microsoft) Account. In Windows 8 and later you can sign in and use a traditional account, called a local account, or with an MS Account.

    A local account is what you use in Windows 7. Using it in Windows 8 or later your user account is not automatically signed in and connected to various Microsoft services like OneDrive, Skype, email and so on. Using an MS Account as a Windows user account you will be automatically connected, for instance in Windows 8 and later you have an email app which automatically connects you to your email when signing in with an MS Account. The screenshot below showing my free Windows 10 Mail App, mail settings correctly set as soon as I sign in:

    Can I change the user's Name and completely remove the old user name?-2015-06-08_15h40_18.png

    When you set your various email accounts up on one PC, they will be automatically set up on other computers. Also, the MS Account allows you to sync your settings. I sign in to one Windows 8 or later computer using my MS Account, set the desktop background and colors, then sign in with the same MS Account to another PC and these settings, as well as my login credentials to the third party sites, browser favorites and so on, everything will be synced. Even the WiFi networks; If I sign in to a WiFi network in let's say a hotel with free WiFi with a laptop running Windows 8 or later using an MS Account, and come back months later with another laptop using the same MS Account, the WiFi settings and credentials are there already.
      My Computer


 

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