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| Why is it that XP Pro requires there to be two administrative accounts (the default Administrator account and the one that you manually add when installing)? I wanted my personal account to be a limited user account but XP tells me I have to have at least one administrative account on the system and doesn't let me change the type to "limited". I can't even delete it. Why can't I just have the one Administrator account? It seems like a waste and besides, if I never use one or the other to perform my administrative tasks, I'll surely forget the password making it useless anyway. Joel Moore | Guest
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| this limitation is imposed by the user interface for the shell's "User Accounts" control panel applet only. on Windows XP Professional, you can still use the "Local Users and Groups" MMC snap-in directly to create user accounts that are members of the "Users" group only (i.e. limited users) without having to create any additional Administrators group users. "Local Users and Groups" is available by running: lusrmgr.msc or via the "Computer Management" snap-in: compmgmt.msc hope this helps, jim. -- This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties, and confers no rights. "Joel Moore" <asdadsasd@asdaadad.com> wrote in message news:Xns93AB7A3B56466asdsadfgasdgadsa@207.46.248.1 6... Quote:
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| "Jim Cavalaris [MS]" <jamesca@online.microsoft.com> wrote in news:3f01dc0a $1@news.microsoft.com: Quote:
I already knew how to create limited users (which can actually be done from both the Control Panel applet and the MMC snap-in). The problem was that the Control Panel applet wouldn't let me change the account type (from administrative to limited) of the account added during install (not the default administrator account, the one added later). But I was able to delete it from the MMC snap-in so now I'm down to one Administrator account. Thanks, Joel Moore | Guest
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| Administrator is your emergency backup admin account for when your day-to-day admin account gets hosed, locked out, the password expires or one of a hundred other glitches shuts you out. This avoids a reinstall of XP. You could make both passwords the same to avoid confusion. -- Kent W. England, Microsoft MVP for Windows "Joel Moore" <asdadsasd@asdaadad.com> wrote in message news:Xns93AB7A3B56466asdsadfgasdgadsa@207.46.248.1 6... Quote:
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