![]() |
| |||||||
| Notices |
![]() |
| LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
| | #1 (permalink) |
| OK I was trying to share my C: drive on this brand new HP computer so that my wife could access it over the small Home Office network I have. when changing the sharing options in Windows Vista Home. I am not sure quite what happen here but now I do not have access to my own C: drive and or permissions to change copy or move anything on it. I have the only user profile on this machine and it is set as the administrator. I have also lost access to all administrative capabilities and believe the registry has become corrupt somehow. My problem is how do I fix this without losing all the files and digital photos I just moved onto the C: drive from our old computer which I have not had time to burn to a CD? -- John Clayton Phx. AZ. | Guest
Posts: n/a
|
|
| | #2 (permalink) | |
| Share the folders not the root of the drive. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "John C" <JohnC@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:B8F67403-32A1-40EF-8019-DBFA9343E23F@microsoft.com... Quote:
| Guest
Posts: n/a
| |
|
| | #3 (permalink) | ||
| I can't share anything now I have no access to do so or permissions? -- John Clayton Phx. AZ. "Kerry Brown" wrote: Quote:
| Guest
Posts: n/a
| ||
|
| | #4 (permalink) | |||
| Try moving the folders you want to share into the Public folder. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "John C" <JohnC@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:AFA91F10-DFC7-42FB-84A3-F50C7835A84A@microsoft.com... Quote:
| Guest
Posts: n/a
| |||
|
| | #5 (permalink) | |||
| I can't it tells me I do not have access to the c: drive. I tried moving them back to my old computer, to the public folder, and burn them to a cd and it tells me the same message every time. -- John Clayton Phx. AZ. "Kerry Brown" wrote: Quote:
| Guest
Posts: n/a
| |||
|
| | #6 (permalink) | |||
| John, If the files on the busted c: drive are important and you have no backups I would spend some money for a high safety option. Determine what type of hard drive is installed. (SATA cable is narrow 1" ? or Parallel PATA 2.5") Purchase a external USB chassis from a Best Buy type place for your type of drive. Also purchase a replacement hard drive for your computer. Remove the current drive (with the busted root) and install it in the external chassis. Install the new drive in your computer and do a complete reinstall from your reinstall DVD you got with your machine. (If you did not get one, you will have to discuss getting one with your computer maker, usually costs $10-20 or so, sometimes free.) Now attach your busted drive/enclosure via the USB. You should see the drive but maybe not any files. You will need to take ownership of the root and all folders and then possibly set permissions to read all the files, then find your important files and copy them to your new system (copy, not move). After you are completely satisfied that you have everything, you can reformat that external drive and use it as a backup destination so the cost is not wasted. You would also have a very good chance of recovering your system by doing a 'repair installation', again from that reinstall DVD. Make sure you say no to anything about repartitioning or formatting the drive! While this is low risk, things can go wrong and you can lose all contents of that drive. You do not want to do a 'recover' from the recovery partition. This is often accomplished by holding F11 (varies among machines and not all systems have the option) during boot. Purpose is to restore to configuration at the time of purchase - WILL DESTROY ALL YOUR STUFF. Michael Vista Home premium "John C" <JohnC@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:AFA91F10-DFC7-42FB-84A3-F50C7835A84A@microsoft.com... Quote:
| Guest
Posts: n/a
| |||
|
| | #7 (permalink) | |||
| Michael, I was kind of afraid of that. I did not get any CD's with this new computer which is a whole 12 days old. I do have other computers in the house that I have already dual installed hd on so I am thinking I might be able to stick this drive as a secondary into my old machine and take ownership of the root to get the files and more important pictures I need. Does that sound right to you? P.S. It would be a lot easier to use repair feature on the windows vista CD that I don't have. -- John Clayton Phx. AZ. "Michael Walraven" wrote: Quote:
| Guest
Posts: n/a
| |||
|
| | #8 (permalink) | |||
| It sounds like you may have two problems coupled with a misunderstanding of how Vista works. Vista has increased security over XP. Administrator accounts work differently. You an still do everything you could do in XP you just have to do it differently. The biggest difference is UAC. http://www.jimmah.com/vista/security..._security.aspx http://www.jimmah.com/vista/Security/uac.aspx Depending on how you moved the files from your old computer you may have to take ownership of them and then give yourself permission to access them. http://www.vista4beginners.com/Chang...take-ownership Note that after you take ownership of the files you may have to log off then log on or reboot the computer before you can change the permissions. -- Kerry Brown Microsoft MVP - Shell/User http://www.vistahelp.ca "John C" <JohnC@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:3B6ABBAD-5BF7-4768-91FA-A86DDDBE0483@microsoft.com... Quote:
| Guest
Posts: n/a
| |||
|
| | #9 (permalink) | |||
| John, Seems like a good option to try. I have read reports that sometimes XP cannot see formerly Vista drives but do not recall if there were any follow-ups on the problem, they both use NTFS so I think there should not be any problem. A big advantage to doing it your way would be that the drive would not be effected. If there is a recovery partition on it (probably the second) then when you restore it to your machine you might be able to restore to the original condition. On some systems, somewhere in the manual there is a procedure to create a full install disk from the recovery partition/initial setup. This is lieu of getting the DVD from the maker. Read the fine print on your manual and check the web site etc. (I had a Dell awhile ago that had the instruction on a piece of cardboard that looked like a DVD). Michael "John C" <JohnC@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:81DAFA82-C836-4029-B651-3DAE93421436@microsoft.com... Quote:
| Guest
Posts: n/a
| |||
|
| | #10 (permalink) | |
| "John C" wrote: Quote:
| Guest
Posts: n/a
| |
|
![]() |
| Tags |
| None |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
| |
| ||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| When standard users access Vista registry remotely, Access Denied | Gayle | Windows Vista Administration | 1 | 10-10-2007 04:48 PM |
| Help: The Disk (partition) is not accessible, Access denied. | Charlie Huang | Windows XP Configuration & Management | 0 | 11-09-2004 02:32 AM |
| My Documents is not Accessible. Access is Denied | Tom West | Windows XP Accessibility | 1 | 10-02-2003 08:46 PM |
| XP folders "not accessible Access is denied" | Gary Norton | Windows XP Security & Administration | 2 | 07-31-2003 06:51 PM |
| XP folders "not accessible Access is denied" | Gary Norton | Windows XP Performance & Maintenance | 1 | 07-31-2003 06:35 PM |