- icacls c:\ /remove "users" from elevated prompt (although UAC is disabled) gives access denied - psexec -s icacls c:\ /remove "users" gives access denied (so running as SYSTEM) - Modifying permissions through GPO, either local or through domain doesn't work, permissions aren't applied (probably also access denied)
Used to be that if I browsed to C:\Users, I saw my user folder along with Public, etc. But now, I not longer see my user folder or All Users unless I unhide "Protected operating system files".
trying to edit the virtual desktop collection deployment allowed me only to change the location of the users profiles disks but the location of the virtual desktops was grayed out so I can not modify it. so I did change the location of the users profiles and copied the *.vhd profile files, but for the virtual desktops I used the Failover-Cluster manager and I did Move ->Virtual Machine Storage.
How do I grant all the power users on our Server 2003 network the ability to install and remove programs as well as use of the system configuration utility (= run-> ms config)? They need these local rights on their workstations (XP and Vista). Either by using a "NET LOCALGROUP" startup script or with Restricted Groups in Group Policy.
Test users: A possible reason for the lesser concern in the case of test administered worldwide might be that the score end users are located in the United States. Score users are more powerful than test takers, because users are in a position to mandate that test takers submit to the test. I don't get the bold part, that's why I don't understand the meaning of "test users".
Every field has its own jargon – and often that jargon seeps over into customer communications because it's written by the people who use it, rather than a copywriter who can try to meet the needs of both the developers and the users. I've written for one of the major airlines and they insisted on calling their storage compartments "stowage compartments." Although that may be correct in ...
Score users are more powerful than test takers, because users are in a position to mandate that test takers submit to the test. I don't get the bold part, that's why I don't understand the meaning of "test users".
The English Style Guide of the International Committee of the Red Cross advises its users: "– as of (as from) vs as at (on) “As of 1 January 2010” means from that date forward, and is synonymous with the less common “as from”; “as at 1 January 2010” means on that exact date and is mainly used in formal and financial writing.
A former Putin confidant compared the dynamic to the radicalization spiral of a social media algorithm, feeding users content that provokes an emotional reaction. “They read his mood and they start to slip him that kind of stuff,” he said.