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User accounts in explorer
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User accounts in explorer
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User accounts in explorer |
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#1 |
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Guest
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Single user of computer and am the administrator, upgraded from XP to Home
premium. In explorer in the Users folder with my account name why do some of the sub-folders such as Application Data, Local Settings, My Documents, NetHood, Send to, Start Menu have little blue shortcut arrows on the icons. I cannot open them getting the message: C:\Users\my name\Local Settings is not accessible Access is denied. When I first installed Vista, I swear I was able to open the Local Settings folder so that I could manually delete entries from the temp folder. Personally I think Microsoft went a little overboard with all this permission stuff. |
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#2 |
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Guest
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"Jr" <jarsil@comcast.net> schrieb im Newsbeitrag news:uFVjG5jWHHA.4872@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl... > Single user of computer and am the administrator, upgraded from XP to Home > premium. In explorer in the Users folder with my account name why do some > of the sub-folders such as Application Data, Local Settings, My Documents, > NetHood, Send to, Start Menu have little blue shortcut arrows on the > icons. I cannot open them getting the message: > C:\Users\my name\Local Settings is not accessible > Access is denied. As far as I understand (I run here a German Vista), you are struggeling with virtual folders. Thouse entries are not real folders, instead it are NTFS links (available for compatibility issues and pointing to the Vista folders aka documents, images etc.). Here is a German blog http://blogs.technet.com/dmelanchth...dows-vista.aspx written by a German MS employee Daniel Melanchthon, who discuss this topic in deepth. Maybe you can use a web-tranlator to read the German text in english. And here is another tipp: Just switch off the Explorer ability to show system folders - it isn't necessary in Windows Vista and it is risky to enable system file view (because some users are struggeling with the NTFS links or trying to delete the desktop.ini files ;-). > > When I first installed Vista, I swear I was able to open the Local > Settings folder so that I could manually delete entries from the temp > folder. > Personally I think this is bullshit or just a phantasy ;-). > Personally I think Microsoft went a little overboard with all this > permission stuff. Won't agree. Just work with Vista instead against Vista and everything will be fine :-). Regards G. Born www.borncity.de |
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#3 |
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Jr
The folders you are looking at that appear to be shortcuts are called Junctions or Symbolic Links. These folders are used for backward compatibility, mostly for installation programs that are looking for an old system folder location. They appear where a system folder location, that was part of a previous version of Windows, has been changed in Vista. When an older installation program is installed, these folders will redirect the installation program to the proper folder in Vista. These folders contain no user information. You can use a command prompt to locate the new folder that the Junction points to. Go to Start and type cmd and click the cmd.exe program. The command window should open at the C:\Users\<username> folder. Type dir /AHL and press the ENTER key. (Note the space in the command) The result will be a list of folders on the C: drive. A typical line will look like this: <date> <time> <JUNCTION> SendTo [C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Roaming\Microsoft\Windows\SendTo] This shows that the information for the old Send To folder is now contained in the folder that the path points to in the brackets. You should see all of the junction points with the old name of the folder and the new location for that folder in Vista. Another example is the old Documents and Settings folder. This is now located at C:\Users. 11/02/2006 05:00 AM <JUNCTION> Documents and Settings [C:\Users] -- Ronnie Vernon Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User "Jr" <jarsil@comcast.net> wrote in message news:uFVjG5jWHHA.4872@TK2MSFTNGP03.phx.gbl... > Single user of computer and am the administrator, upgraded from XP to Home > premium. In explorer in the Users folder with my account name why do some > of the sub-folders such as Application Data, Local Settings, My Documents, > NetHood, Send to, Start Menu have little blue shortcut arrows on the > icons. I cannot open them getting the message: > C:\Users\my name\Local Settings is not accessible > Access is denied. > > When I first installed Vista, I swear I was able to open the Local > Settings folder so that I could manually delete entries from the temp > folder. > > Personally I think Microsoft went a little overboard with all this > permission stuff. |
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