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View All Microsoft Windows Vista General Posts  Ask A New Question 

Run as available in Vista?

Jake posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 9:40 AM

Hi,

I was wondering if there was a way of showing "Run as.." in Vista when right
clicking a shortcut or file.  "Run as.." was a very handy function I used a
lot in Windows Xp. You could run a file as any user.  It seems to have been
replaced by a "run as admin" link.

Jake
reply

 

In Windows XP, when you set up an account with Administrator privileges, then

JCS posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 9:49 AM

In Windows XP, when you set up an account with Administrator privileges,
then it had real Administrator privileges.  You could have several
could select the appropriate "Administrator" account to perform whatever
action you were wanting to do.  In other words, you could have more than one
Administrator on a computer.  In Vista, there is only one true
Administrator, and that account is disabled in a default installation.  Even
if you set up your initial account with administrator privileges, it still
isn't the actual Administrator.  Therefore, there isn't a need to have
multiple Run as.... options, as there is only one Administrator.
reply

Right now I have only one account one my PC with Vista HomePre, that is PAUL.

Paul Sala posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 12:08 PM

Right now I have only one account one my PC with Vista HomePre, that is
PAUL.

If I were enable the admin account:
1. would I then have the option of logging in as PAUL or ADMIN when I turn
my PC on?
2. could I remove the PAUL account and just use the ADMIN account as the
only account on the vista PC?

thanks...
reply

I have a program which part of it requires me to run a set up file as a normal

Jake posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 1:32 PM

I have a program which part of it requires me to run a set up file as a
normal user.  I dont want it to run as admin.  When I click a install file
in Vista it asks me to input the admin password.  I dont want that.  I want
the file to run in the limited account that I am in.
reply

Run as available in Vista?

Synapse Syndrome posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 1:45 PM

But you cannot install things in a limited account.  When you install things
as admin, it does not mean that the program runs as admin when it is being
run.

ss.
reply

Run as available in Vista?

Charlie42 posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 1:50 PM

Yes.


Yes, but it's not recommended.

If you configured Vista with just one account during installation, that
would be an administrator account. You can check this out in Control Panel >
User Accounts and Family Safety > User Accounts.

It is recommended to keep at least two accounts on a machine: An admin
account, and a standard user account. Running as admin all the time leaves
your computer more exposed to malware, and allows users to make bigger
errors. You should configure another admin account, and change PAUL to a
standard user (in the Control Panel).

Charlie42
reply

Run as available in Vista?

The poster formerly known as 'The Poster Formerly Known as Nina DiBoy' posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 1:51 PM

Have you tried holding down the shift key when right-clicking on the
selected object?

--
Priceless quotes in m.p.w.vista.general group:
http://protectfreedom.tripod.com/kick.html

free speech rights under the First Amendment and is a cornerstone of the
creativity and innovation that is a hallmark of this country.  Consumer
rights in the digital age are not frivolous."
- Maura Corbett
reply

I have a program for viewing digital maps called Fugawi.

Jake posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 2:24 PM

I have a program for viewing digital maps called Fugawi.  When I insert a
disk a program runs automatically. There are two buttons on this splash like
screen. One is install the map viewer and the other is copy maps to disk.  I
install the map viewer by inserting the disk in admin account. I then shared
the program folder with other users on the computer.  Then I log out and go
into a limited account.  In windows XP i just clicked the program on the
disk that gave me the splash screen and it ran in the limited account and I
can then click the button to transfer the maps to disk.  This was the only
way I could get the program to run properly.  However in Vista when I click
an install or any program file it runs it as admin. I dont want this.  I
want the program to run in the limited account.
reply

Run as available in Vista?

Synapse Syndrome posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 2:39 PM

I do not know if these discs have data that can be used with Global
Navigator, or if that is what you are using, but apparently the latest
version is Vista compatible.

http://www.fugawi.com/web/products/fugawi_global_navigator.htm

ss.
reply

Run as available in Vista?

Andrew McLaren posted on Monday, October 01, 2007 7:24 PM

In the GUI, the only only option is to Run As Administrator.

From a command prompt, you can use the runas.exe command to run a program as
any arbiraty user; whether administrator or not. So for example:

C:\Users\User1>runas /user:user2 notepad

... to run Notepad as User2, whhile logged in as User1. Do "runas /?" to see
the full syntax options.

Hope it helps,

--
Andrew McLaren
amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au
reply

Run as available in Vista?

Pi posted on Sunday, October 28, 2007 4:32 PM

But how do you do that? I still haven't managed to figure out how to make
Run As Administrator work.
It doesn't ask for a password, it just runs as me, regardless of whether I'm
logged in as a restricted user or as an admin.


Ah, that works. Thanks! That will do as a workaround until I find the answer.

Pim
reply

Run as available in Vista?

Andrew McLaren posted on Sunday, October 28, 2007 6:12 PM

You right-click the EXE file which launches the program, and then choose the
option "Run as Administrator" from the context menu which will appear.

So to run Notepad as Administrator, find C"\Windows\System32\Notepad.exe" in
Explorer, right-click the EXE file and choose Run as Administrator. If your
current user account is already a member of the Administrator's group, you
will need to provde your consent by pressing an OK button. If your current
user account is a Standard user, you will need to provide the account name
and password of an Administrator account, to perform the action.

Many Start Menu shortcuts will also allow you to do "Run as Administrator"
(as long as the Start Menu item is a shotcut to the EXE file). Just find the
icon for your program in the Start menu, and right-click.

Some Start Menu shortcuts don't allow "Run as Administrator" - in
particular, Office applications cannot be run as Administrator from teh
Start Menu. You need to locate the real WINWORD.EXE file (or whatever) and
run that. I suspect this is a technical oversight by Office.

You can also open a Command Prompt "as Administrator"  - that is, find
Command Prompt in the Start menu, right-click it and choose "Run as
Administrator". Then any program you run from within the Command Prompt will
have the full administrative token.

In Vista, even if you are logged in as an administrator, the security token
attached to your logon is equivalent to the security token of a Standard
user. If you ask to perform some administrative action, such as "Run as
Administrator", then your security token gets elevated to a full
administator token for the duration of the requested operation. Then you
revert to being a normal user. This prevents viruses etc taking advantage of
the fact you are logged in as administrator, to perform insecure exploits on
your system configuration.

Hope it helps,
--
Andrew McLaren
amclar (at) optusnet dot com dot au
reply

 
 

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