Re: Duplicate Administrator accounts



Thanks - that's pretty much what I suspected (dreaded).

What about if I changed the Registry for automatic Admin logon - does that
put any more rigor on the username?

It looks like I'll have to reinstall windows and all my software... is there
a way of making a copy of the software to save having to find all the cds? If
I used Norton Ghost .. I'd end up where I am now I guess?
thanks again

"Roger Abell [MVP]" wrote:

Thanks for the reply with added info.
Here is what I am thinking is going on, but how to get out of
this situation I am not quite sure, well, at least not if you have
only one machine (if you have another, networked, and the
firewall is permissive on the troublesome XP Pro, then maybe).

In XP one can log in with either the account or the name. For
example, I define an account "someaccount" and for the name
I provide "somename", then either may be used to login.
So, I am guessing you have an account Admin (perhaps), and
you gave it the name Administrator. Then, when you try to log
in with Administrator it is using the Admin account.

The problem comes in that either login method for XP Pro
(Welcome screen, which would show Administrator, the name,
for the Admin account; or entry of cntrl-alt-del-del to get the
old login dialog) will use the name or the account.


"still learning ...." <stilllearning@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote in
message news:6957C0C1-2205-4DA9-92BF-48C55AECBC60@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
thank you for your interest..
Result of net localgroup .....is
"Alias name administrators
comment Administrators have complete and ....
Members
-----------
Administrator

echo %homepath% is \Documents and Settings\Admin

Windows XP Pro

"msnews mvp" wrote:

So you are saying that you have two accounts, both of which are named
Administrator ? And that one is and one is not member of Administrators,
but, although you know the password for the one that is a member of the
Administrators group you cannot log into that account because login is
always happening using the non-admin account.

When logged in, what is the result from, at a cmd prompt, running
net localgroup administrators
and from running
echo %homepath%

What is the OS and is this machine domain joined?

Roger

"still learning ...." <still learning ....@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote
in message news:C98E5527-86E6-4CA5-B0E1-A1ABC3499D61@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
I have accidentally created an "administrator" account which doesn't
have
administrator privileges. When i try to log on as administrator I end
up
logged onto the wrong one and i can't find any way of really logging on
as
administrator. No other account belongs to the administrator group so
I'm
in
trouble







.



Relevant Pages

  • Re: Keep admins off of client machines
    ... the sharepoint admin is simple, just create a standard user account for them ... The 'Domain Administrator' account is ... Domain Administrator password. ... takes a thorough understanding of such priveleges to do so. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.server.sbs)
  • Re: firewall on budget ?
    ... 1)Work in Admin mode, and through 'run as', browse ... If working in admin mode and doing runas to browse in a guest account. ... Installing a program, getting an error, then doing the run as, can be ... running as administrator all the time. ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.security_admin)
  • Re: cant login as a admin
    ... First you must consider the factors at if you are a plain home user better check if your account has administrator privileges. ... cant login to Admin acc.unknow passwork and if i login under a user acc. ...
    (microsoft.public.windows.vista.security)
  • Re: PLEASE.....ANY HELP GREATLY APPRECIATED
    ... Administrator account without needing to go through Windows. ... "John John" wrote: ... I wanted to get rid of that annoying login screen on my home computer (which ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.help_and_support)
  • Re: Duplicate Administrator accounts
    ... You would likely need admin privileges to do that. ... The other is to try to login via runas with the real administrator account. ...
    (microsoft.public.security)