Hi,
My problem was not exactly like yours, but I was asked to log in as
administrator to activate a key. I checked all the rights of the user
(myself) (had the administrator rights like yours). There should not be any
other administrator, I am the only user. Then I checked the Administrator
Tools under Control Panel. Computer Management=>User Groups. There I saw
"Administrator" a disabled account. I enabled it and I could log on and did
whatever I needed to under that account. If that helps, just use only
"Administrator" account. I have not tried, but maybe you can change its name
to whatever you wish. BTW, I do not think Vista authors are so smart. Why did
they disable this account? To make us proud, when we solved the puzzle?
"Myk" wrote:
>
> Myk;574746 Wrote:
> > I figured something out, if I restart then I have permission again. I
> > just have to restart the computer 5-6 times every workday it seems -
> > that's how often this 'feature' makes itself known.
> >
> > Reminds me of the good old days of having to restart Windows95 many
> > times a day 'cause of it's memory management issues. The more things
> > change, the more they stay the same.
>
> This is not the answer. Windows Vista is the best operating system in
> the world, lots of very very smart people have explained how it is so
> superior to any flavor of Linux, any flavor of OSX. Linux and OSX don't
> require multiple restarts to maintain existing permissions, Windows
> Vista shouldn't either. This is MY fault, it's gotta be something so
> simple and basic I'm an idiot for missing it.
>
> I'm using a very new Hewlett Packard computer, came with Vista
> installed and meets Vists'a requirements - with a 2gigahertz intel
> processor and 2 gigs of Ram.
>
> I admit it, I'm dumb as a post - now tell me why. Be rude. I just want
> an answer.
>
>
> --
> Myk
>