No Talent Ass Clowns must die!
Posted: 04 Jun 2006, 18:37
How is it that F'ing retards like this one
http://www.computerworld.com/action/art ... Id=9000829 get paid to right lies like this and if I call them an F'ing moron which is only the truth I won't get one dime?
Lie #1: The Administrator account is inaccessible in Windows Vista.
This is false. Because, at the moment, the classic login is not available in Windows Vista (although it may reappear in certain versions) he seems to believe that the Administrator account is no longer accessible.
By creating .reg file with the following contents (and then double clicking it) it is possible to get the Administrator Account to appear in the Welcome Screen. Clicking on "User Accounts" in the Control Panel after creating this entry will also allow you to make changes to the Administrator account, and enable it in the event that it is disabled. This is the same registry entry to do the same in Windows XP.
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\SpecialAccounts\UserList]
"Administrator"=dword:00000001
Lie #2: User Access Control is an annoying new feature of Windows Vista that cannot be disabled.
This is also untrue. By clicking on "User Accounts" in the Control Panel, and then the "Change security Settings" it is possible to disable UAC.
Mostly Lie #3: User Access Control has a feature to prompt for elevation of permissions, but when it does this it locks you out of the desktop until you respond.
This is true. At least in the default behaviour. If this annoys you to no end, then you can change it by running secpol.msc and choosing Local Policies from the drop down menu on the left, and then Security Options, you should then see several options on the right. Choose the "User Account Control: Switch to the secure desktop when prompting for elevation" and disable it.
Lie #4: Vista Beta 2 has more bugs than ever and is completely unstable.
I don't believe this is this case. While the number of bugs could easily be more or less, I am finding Vista Beta 2 to be more stable than any of the previous versions. In some previous versions I had unexplainable crashes of Explorer on brand new installs. That is certainly not the case in Beta 2, and in the last several days of using it, I have not had any crashes whatsoever.
Stupid people should have their pens taken away. And if they try to take them back they should be murdered in cold blood.
http://www.computerworld.com/action/art ... Id=9000829 get paid to right lies like this and if I call them an F'ing moron which is only the truth I won't get one dime?
Lie #1: The Administrator account is inaccessible in Windows Vista.
This is false. Because, at the moment, the classic login is not available in Windows Vista (although it may reappear in certain versions) he seems to believe that the Administrator account is no longer accessible.
By creating .reg file with the following contents (and then double clicking it) it is possible to get the Administrator Account to appear in the Welcome Screen. Clicking on "User Accounts" in the Control Panel after creating this entry will also allow you to make changes to the Administrator account, and enable it in the event that it is disabled. This is the same registry entry to do the same in Windows XP.
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Winlogon\SpecialAccounts\UserList]
"Administrator"=dword:00000001
Lie #2: User Access Control is an annoying new feature of Windows Vista that cannot be disabled.
This is also untrue. By clicking on "User Accounts" in the Control Panel, and then the "Change security Settings" it is possible to disable UAC.
Mostly Lie #3: User Access Control has a feature to prompt for elevation of permissions, but when it does this it locks you out of the desktop until you respond.
This is true. At least in the default behaviour. If this annoys you to no end, then you can change it by running secpol.msc and choosing Local Policies from the drop down menu on the left, and then Security Options, you should then see several options on the right. Choose the "User Account Control: Switch to the secure desktop when prompting for elevation" and disable it.
Lie #4: Vista Beta 2 has more bugs than ever and is completely unstable.
I don't believe this is this case. While the number of bugs could easily be more or less, I am finding Vista Beta 2 to be more stable than any of the previous versions. In some previous versions I had unexplainable crashes of Explorer on brand new installs. That is certainly not the case in Beta 2, and in the last several days of using it, I have not had any crashes whatsoever.
Stupid people should have their pens taken away. And if they try to take them back they should be murdered in cold blood.