Because you shouldn't (and generally can't) use the built-in account to log
in. After you create the first user, which is put in the administrators
group by default, all subsequent user accounts are "standard" ones by
default. This makes sure you have at least one account to manage your
machine with, without having to use the (super-privileged) built-in
"Administrator" one. As soon as the first admin account has ben created,
"Administrator" becomes unavailable for login except in safe mode. This UAC
protection for the Administrators group is overkill, IMO, but then many
people will omit the creation of standard accounts for their day-to-day
work, so I suppose it's a necessary precaution. It *would* be awfully nice
and thoughtful of Microsoft, to turn off the f(censored)g UAC warnings for
the Administrators as soon as at least one standard account has been created
and initialized (I mean, used at least once), though.
--
Pierre Szwarc
Paris, France
PGP key ID 0x75B5779B
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Multitasking: Reading in the bathroom !
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"BillD" <> a écrit dans le message de news:
176F71D4-7981-425D-A945-...
| The first user account in Windows Vista beta2 is an *administrator*
protected
| by UAC (go to management console to see the account type). But why it's
not a
| *Standard user* protected by UAC?
| I think the best is that the first account is by default a standard user
| protected by UAC and not administrator and during installation is also
| created another account administrator protected by UAC, non visibile, but
| with a password chosen by the user. Only in this way there's a chance that
| many users will run Vista as standard account.
|