Windows Vista Tips

Windows Vista Tips > Newsgroups > Windows Vista General Discussion > Change Name Of Users Folder In C Drive - Is This Possible?

Reply
Thread Tools Display Modes

Change Name Of Users Folder In C Drive - Is This Possible?

 
 
Greg Matthews
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      08-07-2008
Hi,

When I got a new PC, I changed the username in User Accounts to my own name.
However, in C:\Users, there are 2 folders titled Public and User. Is this
correct or should the folder titled User be my own name? I would like this
to show my own username, but do not seem to be able to carry this out?

Can someone let me know if this is possible to do without having to
re-install Vista Home Premium?

Thanks

Greg

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Malke
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      08-07-2008
Greg Matthews wrote:

> Hi,
>
> When I got a new PC, I changed the username in User Accounts to my own
> name.
> However, in C:\Users, there are 2 folders titled Public and User. Is this
> correct or should the folder titled User be my own name? I would like
> this to show my own username, but do not seem to be able to carry this
> out?
>
> Can someone let me know if this is possible to do without having to
> re-install Vista Home Premium?


As you have discovered, simply renaming your user account the way you did
does not change the actual user account name (which is the generic "User").
While logged into an account with administrative privileges, go to the User
Accounts Applet in Control Panel and create:

1. A Standard user account for your own personal daily use.

2. An extra Administrator account for elevation and emergencies. You may
never need to log into this account but someday you may be very glad you
were foresighted enough to create it.

3. Now log into the new Standard user account. You can copy your data from
User to it. Once you have everything set up the way you like, you can
delete User - or keep it and just delete the extra set of data.

Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ

 
Reply With Quote
 
Greg Matthews
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      08-08-2008
Hi,

Thanks for this information. If I create a standard user account, will this
mean that I am unable to run certain programs that require administration
permissions? Also, how would I transfer items in the current User folder
over to the standard user account in the easiest way?

Also, Is there any way that I am able to change anything within my current
profile where I have set up all my preferences, programs,etc or would I have
to set up everything again within the standard user account and effectively
start again?

Finally, I would have a situation where I would have 3 profiles, named, for
example:

Bob Smith (current profile)
BobSmith (new admin profile)
Bob_Smith (new standard user profile)

Is that correct, and would then log in to my required profile each time?

Thanks again for your help on this.

Greg.

"Malke" <> wrote in message
news:uhNWyXO%...
> Greg Matthews wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> When I got a new PC, I changed the username in User Accounts to my own
>> name.
>> However, in C:\Users, there are 2 folders titled Public and User. Is
>> this
>> correct or should the folder titled User be my own name? I would like
>> this to show my own username, but do not seem to be able to carry this
>> out?
>>
>> Can someone let me know if this is possible to do without having to
>> re-install Vista Home Premium?

>
> As you have discovered, simply renaming your user account the way you did
> does not change the actual user account name (which is the generic
> "User").
> While logged into an account with administrative privileges, go to the
> User
> Accounts Applet in Control Panel and create:
>
> 1. A Standard user account for your own personal daily use.
>
> 2. An extra Administrator account for elevation and emergencies. You may
> never need to log into this account but someday you may be very glad you
> were foresighted enough to create it.
>
> 3. Now log into the new Standard user account. You can copy your data from
> User to it. Once you have everything set up the way you like, you can
> delete User - or keep it and just delete the extra set of data.
>
> Malke
> --
> MS-MVP
> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
> FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ
>


 
Reply With Quote
 
Victor Constantinescu
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      08-08-2008
Hi,
Creating a standard username means that you will need to supply
administrative credentials whenever you need to launch a program that
requires administrative privileges.

You can do a side-by-side migration using the Windows Easy Transfer wizard
(type easy transfer in the quick search) so you will kepp all your files and
preferences.

--
Victor Constantinescu aka YounGun
Security MVP
http://victor-youngun.blogspot.com/


"Greg Matthews" <> wrote in message
news:O9pVExR%...
> Hi,
>
> Thanks for this information. If I create a standard user account, will
> this mean that I am unable to run certain programs that require
> administration permissions? Also, how would I transfer items in the
> current User folder over to the standard user account in the easiest way?
>
> Also, Is there any way that I am able to change anything within my current
> profile where I have set up all my preferences, programs,etc or would I
> have to set up everything again within the standard user account and
> effectively start again?
>
> Finally, I would have a situation where I would have 3 profiles, named,
> for example:
>
> Bob Smith (current profile)
> BobSmith (new admin profile)
> Bob_Smith (new standard user profile)
>
> Is that correct, and would then log in to my required profile each time?
>
> Thanks again for your help on this.
>
> Greg.
>
> "Malke" <> wrote in message
> news:uhNWyXO%...
>> Greg Matthews wrote:
>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> When I got a new PC, I changed the username in User Accounts to my own
>>> name.
>>> However, in C:\Users, there are 2 folders titled Public and User. Is
>>> this
>>> correct or should the folder titled User be my own name? I would like
>>> this to show my own username, but do not seem to be able to carry this
>>> out?
>>>
>>> Can someone let me know if this is possible to do without having to
>>> re-install Vista Home Premium?

>>
>> As you have discovered, simply renaming your user account the way you did
>> does not change the actual user account name (which is the generic
>> "User").
>> While logged into an account with administrative privileges, go to the
>> User
>> Accounts Applet in Control Panel and create:
>>
>> 1. A Standard user account for your own personal daily use.
>>
>> 2. An extra Administrator account for elevation and emergencies. You may
>> never need to log into this account but someday you may be very glad you
>> were foresighted enough to create it.
>>
>> 3. Now log into the new Standard user account. You can copy your data
>> from
>> User to it. Once you have everything set up the way you like, you can
>> delete User - or keep it and just delete the extra set of data.
>>
>> Malke
>> --
>> MS-MVP
>> Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
>> FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ
>>

>


 
Reply With Quote
 
Malke
Guest
Posts: n/a

 
      08-08-2008
Greg Matthews wrote:

Comments inline:

> Thanks for this information. If I create a standard user account, will
> this mean that I am unable to run certain programs that require
> administration permissions?


You should never be running as Administrator in Vista, only Standard. All
programs written for Vista understand the permission structure. If you have
older programs that need to run as administrator, consider replacing them.
Otherwise work with them on a case-by-case basis.

> Also, how would I transfer items in the current User folder
> over to the standard user account in the easiest way?


You can create your new user account as Administrator so it matches your old
permissions and after everything is transferred, change it to Standard. You
will have previously created at least one other Administrator account
(aside from the built-in Administrator account which is disabled by default
in Vista) for elevation and emergency purposes.

> Also, Is there any way that I am able to change anything within my current
> profile where I have set up all my preferences, programs,etc or would I
> have to set up everything again within the standard user account and
> effectively start again?


You can use the WET method as suggested by the other poster or you can copy
the old account to the new one with this method:

1. Create the new user account and at least one extra account with
administrative privileges.

2. Log into the new user account and then log into the extra account.

3. Control Panel>System>Advanced>User Profiles>Settings

4. You will see where you can copy user accounts. Copy the old account to
the new one from there. Use the Browse to select your new account (C
\Users\newaccount).

> Finally, I would have a situation where I would have 3 profiles, named,
> for example:
>
> Bob Smith (current profile)
> BobSmith (new admin profile)
> Bob_Smith (new standard user profile)
>
> Is that correct, and would then log in to my required profile each time?


You certainly wouldn't be foolish enough to name the accounts all the same!
That would just be confusing. But yes, you would have the three new
accounts if you decided not to delete the "Bob Smith (current profile"). If
you want the machine to log into the Bob_Smith Standard profile
automatically (go directly to the Desktop), that is easily accomplished.

The instructions at this link work for both XP and Vista:

Configure Windows to Automatically Login (MVP Ramesh) -
http://windowsxp.mvps.org/Autologon.htm

Malke
--
MS-MVP
Elephant Boy Computers - Don't Panic!
FAQ - http://www.elephantboycomputers.com/#FAQ

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Change Folder name for C:/Users/account_name Gary McCready Windows Vista Administration 11 07-23-2008 12:00 PM
change the way users log on and off jimmyray8611 Windows Vista Administration 3 11-05-2007 02:20 PM
Change the way users log on or off Fklassen Windows Vista General Discussion 7 07-08-2007 05:55 PM
Users Folder always gets shared when sharing another folder ??? Cornflakes Windows Vista Networking 3 03-14-2007 09:48 AM
Change location of Users folder Gav Windows Vista Installation 3 06-08-2006 04:42 PM



1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59