Very helpful, I did not know that. I guess, then, that Quicken or Turbotax
can still be opened by others unless I got that warning to install for all or
just this user. Of course they are password protected so that's OK. Thanks
again, good answer.
mike
"riddik" wrote:
> On Apr 28, 12:03 pm, mike_XP_Vista
> <mike_XP_Vi...@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote:
> > Hi, I used to be annoyed by that in XP and am about to buy a Vista PC, so
> > would like to add something here. Let's say I install another vendor's
> > product, like Quicken or Turbotax and I am the administrator. If I have an
> > account for my son, I can see the icon for TurboTax on hisdesktop(at least
> > in XP I can). I don't want that. So are you saying in Vista I can install
> > it when I am logged in under my name (an Admin account), and it will give me
> > the "this user only" prompt?
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Mike
>
> As Mr. Vernon wrote:
>
> > > Many programs will ask, before they install, if you want the program to be
> > > available to alluserson the system or just the user who is installing the
> > > program. Some programs don't ask and just install the program for allusers.
> > > When this happens you get the result that you are seeing.
>
> It depends on the program you are installing.
>
> It's not a new thing with Vista, XP supports the behavior as well.
> So, if you installed a program on XP and it didn't stop and ask about
> installing for all users or just one, it won't do it on Vista, either.
>
> You can remove a shortcut from an individual user's desktop on either
> OS by moving the icon from the All Users (on Vista, Public) Desktop
> directory into the Desktop directory(s) for the user(s) you want.
> While you're at it, you can do the same for the Start Menu listing of
> any applications, as well. Just be aware that you're only moving
> shortcuts around, and the executable file for the program can be
> launched without a shortcut, via Windows Explorer or a command prompt,
> unless you set permissions otherwise.
>
> M Patterson
>
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