Re: Change from Administrator to Power user
- From: Oiprox <aev@xxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Fri, 13 Jan 2006 16:34:01 -0800
I forgot to say that the user and the workstation are part of a domain, so i
cannot create another user account so easily. Moreover i must mention that I
have to change rights not of one user but of 30 in a short time. Some of them
have outlook base up to 4 Gb - so the process of migrating data will take too
much time.
Sometimes I change permissions to registry branches for the user to full
control and make him the owner of the folder with his accont settings in Docs
and settings and it works but sometimes it doesn't! And I cannot guarantee
the user that in the future he will have no problem because of it.
--
Best regards,
Oiprox
"Juan" wrote:
> "Jesper Johansson" [MSFT] said:
>
> > Why do you need to change a user from administrator to Power User? It buys
> you almost nothing from a security perspective.
> Your statement conflicts with many MVPs but coming directly from Microsoft I
> don't doubt you are correct, but still I'd be interested to know the facts.
>
> > A Power User is just an administrator that has not made himself an
> administrator yet. If anything you need to change it to a regular user.
> I didn't know that a power user could make himself an administrator, would
> you care to elaborate.
>
> > More than likely the creator/owner on the user's profile is listed as
> "Administrators" not the user account.
> That can easily easily be changed.
>
> > The Files and Settings Transfer Wizard is the easiest way "to more the
> profile".
> (?) You lost me here. I'd be interested to know your meaning; any tip is a
> good tip specially coming directly from Microsoft.
>
> And I responded to the OP request with what seems to me the most practical
> approach and because I believe it's best to have more than one
> administrative account, and I didn't mention it but seems obvious he should
> leave the administrative account as it is and instead of converting it to
> power or regular user, he should instead create a new account, and the File
> and settings wizard seems to me the most practical approach to transfer
> files and settings to the new account without modifying the administrative
> account.. but that's just my point of view of course and just a suggestion.
>
> > > --------------------------------
> > > "Oiprox" <aev@xxxxxxxxxxx> escribió en el mensaje
> > > news:35FF2481-16E8-4634-B82F-7C4E8C8FEF34@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> > >>
> > >> Hello Everyone!
> > >> I need to change a user rights from Administrator to Power user but
> when
> > >> I
> > >> do it - the system after logging off and On says that it cannot access
> > >> the
> > >> Desktop folder - and the best part of user settings get corrupted!
> > >> When I return the rights of Administrator - everything is OK!
> > >> What is the best and 100% way of changing rights from Admin to PU?
> > >> --
> > >> Best regards,
> > >> Oiprox
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
>
>
>
>
.
- Follow-Ups:
- Re: Change from Administrator to Power user
- From: Juan
- Re: Change from Administrator to Power user
- References:
- Re: Chenge from Administrator to Power user
- From: Juan
- Re: Chenge from Administrator to Power user
- From: Jesper [MSFT]
- Re: Chenge from Administrator to Power user
- From: Juan
- Re: Chenge from Administrator to Power user
- Prev by Date: Re: private folders
- Next by Date: Re: administrator account security risk
- Previous by thread: Re: Chenge from Administrator to Power user
- Next by thread: Re: Change from Administrator to Power user
- Index(es):
Relevant Pages
|