Hi Nook,
> I am the only user of my home pc. Hence I am the Administrator.
Not necessarily so. There is a default administrator account, and there are
administrator level accounts. In the XP Home version, the default account is
hidden once there are other administrator level accounts. This may help
explain what you are seeing.
> When I switch on the pc I am automatically logged on as Administrator,
> with
> no other accounts (except "Guest") showing.
Not unusual if no account passwords are set up.
> However, I am getting confused whether this is correct (specifically in
> relation to certain settings and where my active files are kept).
A user's files are generally kept within their user profile. More on this
below.
> 1. Settings
> - I have been having problems with the automatic updates (e.g. Windows;
> Norton; etc.). When I look in "Control Panel" "Administrative Tools"
> "Services" then it shows "logon as Local System". Is this causing the
> problem
> with not getting live updates of programs?
That allows the service to run with the appropriate level of privileges and
is quite normal. There may be a conflict (with Norton software this is all
too common) with which program is in charge of what. Try
disabling/uninstalling the Norton software to see if the Windows Update
resumes itself.
> 2. Files
> - within the C: drive "Documents and Settings" I have folders for both
> "Administrator"/ "Default user"/ "All Users" and "Nook" (which is me)
> - all my active files (documents/ photos/ etc) are in "Nook"
> - is this correct and why is it so if I am logged on as Administrator?
Click start/run, type %userprofile% and click ok. The folder that it opens
to is your user profile folder, and I'm betting that it's "Nook". Under here
you will also find folders (directories) for your desktop, start menu, and
"My Documents" as well as other system settings. These are the default
locations for user-defined settings and for storing files.
The "Administrator" is the default one mentioned earlier, it is generally
not used for day to day operations but rather as a fail safe for
troubleshooting the system. "Default User" is a profile created by the
manufacturer for the initial setup when you first plug the machine in, once
you create your own profile, it is used as a template. "All Users" is
exactly what its name implies, it is files, start menu items, and settings
common to all accounts. The documents folder here is all seen as the shared
documents folder.
> I am concerned that I am logging on incorrectly and thus inabling certain
> functions. I was expecting to have everything under
> C:docs/administrator....
Hopefully I have just explained why you do not.
> Appreciate any clarification....
Feel free to ask any follow up questions.
--
Best of Luck,
Rick Rogers, aka "Nutcase" - Microsoft MVP
http://mvp.support.microsoft.com/
Windows help -
www.rickrogers.org
"Nook" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
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