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MSAS Problem New User Setup.
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MSAS Problem New User Setup.
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MSAS Problem New User Setup. |
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#1 |
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Guest
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When ever i click the MSAS icon in the sys tray it loads
up the new user setup wizard every time i click it. I have tried re installing but nothing seems to fix it. And this means taht MSAS isnt running in the sys tray which means it isnt protecting my computer. Thanks in advance for any help. |
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#2 |
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>-----Original Message----- >When ever i click the MSAS icon in the sys tray it loads >up the new user setup wizard every time i click it. > >I have tried re installing but nothing seems to fix it. > >And this means taht MSAS isnt running in the sys tray >which means it isnt protecting my computer. > >Thanks in advance for any help. >. >Please try my fix here. I also got the error on my system, and this cleared it up, even the numerous times when I tried to break it during testing: http://castlecops.com/t120958-NEW_E..._5_15_2005.html |
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#3 |
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I believe that I've seen this fix by uninstalling, blowing away the
installation folder (and files) which are left behind, and then reinstalling. I'd be interested to hear whether the error 101 fix from your other respondent does the job for you. If it does, we have a different error 101 fix which might be easier or preferable. -- FAQ for Microsoft Antispyware: http://www.geocities.com/marfer_mvp/FAQ_MSantispy.htm "Ben" <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:089401c55e09$feeed9f0$a501280a@phx.gbl... > When ever i click the MSAS icon in the sys tray it loads > up the new user setup wizard every time i click it. > > I have tried re installing but nothing seems to fix it. > > And this means taht MSAS isnt running in the sys tray > which means it isnt protecting my computer. > > Thanks in advance for any help. |
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#4 |
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Here it is:
or Windows XP Professional: To change the setting on Windows XP Professional, open "Local Security Policy" in Administrative Tools, or run secpol.msc. You need to be an admin to use this tool. In the left pane, browse to Security Settings \ Local Policies \ Security Options. The policy name is "System objects: Default owner for objects created by members of the Administrators group". The allowable settings are "Administrators group" or "Object creator". Change it to "Administrators group." After that change has been made, please refresh the policy by typing: "gpupdate /force" from a command prompt. For Windows XP Home Edition: IMPORTANT: This article contains information about modifying the registry. Before you modify the registry, make sure to back it up and make sure that you understand how to restore the registry if a problem occurs. For information about how to back up, restore, and edit the registry, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base: 256986 Description of the Microsoft Windows Registry The "Local Security Policy" snap-in is not available on Windows XP Home Edition. To change the setting on XP Home, you need to modify the Registry directly. Please back up your registry in case you need to restore it. If you do not feel comfortable doing this, do not try this workaround. In Regedit, navigate to HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Lsa. Find the value called "nodefaultadminowner". The supported values are "0" for "Administrators group", or "1" for "Object creator". Set the value to 0. Please provide feedback if this is working. -- -steve Steve Dodson [MSFT] MCSE, CISSP PSS Security -- Andre http://spaces.msn.com/members/adacosta FAQ for MS AntiSpy http://www.geocities.com/marfer_mvp/FAQ_MSantispy.htm "Bill Sanderson" <Bill_Sanderson@msn.com.plugh.org> wrote in message news:O043PflXFHA.328@cpmsftngsa05.privatenews.microsoft.com... >I believe that I've seen this fix by uninstalling, blowing away the >installation folder (and files) which are left behind, and then >reinstalling. > > I'd be interested to hear whether the error 101 fix from your other > respondent does the job for you. If it does, we have a different error > 101 fix which might be easier or preferable. > > -- > FAQ for Microsoft Antispyware: > http://www.geocities.com/marfer_mvp/FAQ_MSantispy.htm > > "Ben" <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:089401c55e09$feeed9f0$a501280a@phx.gbl... >> When ever i click the MSAS icon in the sys tray it loads >> up the new user setup wizard every time i click it. >> >> I have tried re installing but nothing seems to fix it. >> >> And this means taht MSAS isnt running in the sys tray >> which means it isnt protecting my computer. >> >> Thanks in advance for any help. > > |
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#5 |
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ugh--I'd forgotten it was that one--not so easy--but it shouldn't have to be
repeated--it ought to do the job once and for all. -- "Andre Da Costa" <andred25@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:OiQwEQmXFHA.2216@CPMSFTNGSA04.privatenews.microsoft.com... > Here it is: > or Windows XP Professional: > To change the setting on Windows XP Professional, open "Local Security > Policy" in Administrative Tools, or run secpol.msc. You need to be an > admin > to use this tool. In the left pane, browse to Security Settings \ Local > Policies \ Security Options. The policy name is "System objects: Default > owner for objects created by members of the Administrators group". The > allowable settings are "Administrators group" or "Object creator". Change > it > to "Administrators group." After that change has been made, please refresh > the policy by typing: "gpupdate /force" from a command prompt. > > For Windows XP Home Edition: > > IMPORTANT: This article contains information about modifying the registry. > Before you modify the registry, make sure to back it up and make sure that > you understand how to restore the registry if a problem occurs. For > information about how to back up, restore, and edit the registry, click > the > following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge > Base: > > 256986 Description of the Microsoft Windows Registry > The "Local Security Policy" snap-in is not available on Windows XP Home > Edition. To change the setting on XP Home, you need to modify the Registry > directly. Please back up your registry in case you need to restore it. If > you do not feel comfortable doing this, do not try this workaround. > > In Regedit, navigate to > HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\Lsa. Find the value > called "nodefaultadminowner". The supported values are "0" for > "Administrators group", or "1" for "Object creator". Set the value to 0. > > Please provide feedback if this is working. > > -- > -steve > > Steve Dodson [MSFT] > MCSE, CISSP > PSS Security > -- > > Andre > http://spaces.msn.com/members/adacosta > FAQ for MS AntiSpy http://www.geocities.com/marfer_mvp/FAQ_MSantispy.htm > > "Bill Sanderson" <Bill_Sanderson@msn.com.plugh.org> wrote in message > news:O043PflXFHA.328@cpmsftngsa05.privatenews.microsoft.com... >>I believe that I've seen this fix by uninstalling, blowing away the >>installation folder (and files) which are left behind, and then >>reinstalling. >> >> I'd be interested to hear whether the error 101 fix from your other >> respondent does the job for you. If it does, we have a different error >> 101 fix which might be easier or preferable. >> >> -- >> FAQ for Microsoft Antispyware: >> http://www.geocities.com/marfer_mvp/FAQ_MSantispy.htm >> >> "Ben" <anonymous@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message >> news:089401c55e09$feeed9f0$a501280a@phx.gbl... >>> When ever i click the MSAS icon in the sys tray it loads >>> up the new user setup wizard every time i click it. >>> >>> I have tried re installing but nothing seems to fix it. >>> >>> And this means taht MSAS isnt running in the sys tray >>> which means it isnt protecting my computer. >>> >>> Thanks in advance for any help. >> >> > > |
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